TOP 10
CHICAGO
ELAINE GLUSAC ELISA KRONISH ROBERTA SOTONOFF
EYEWITNESS TRAVEL
Contents
Left Nighthawks, The Art Institute of Chicago Right View from Sears Tower
Contents Chicago’s Top 10 Chicago Highlights Produced by Departure Lounge, London Reproduced by Colourscan, Singapore Printed and bound by South China Printing Co. Ltd., China First American Edition, 2004 06 07 08 09 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Published in the United States by DK Publishing, Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014
Reprinted with revisions 2006, 2008 Copyright 2004, 2008 © Dorling Kindersley Limited, London A Penguin Company All rights reserved under International and PanAmerican Copyright Conventions. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner. Published in Great Britan by Dorling Kindersley Limited
ISSN 1479-344X ISBN 978-0-75660-031-0 Within each Top 10 list in this book, no hierarchy of quality or popularity is implied. All 10 are, in the editor’s opinion, of roughly equal merit. Floors are referred to throughout in accordance with British usage; ie the “first floor” is the floor above ground level.
6
The Art Institute of Chicago 8 Sears Tower & its Views
12
Field Museum
14
Museum of Science & Industry
16
Navy Pier
20
John G. Shedd Aquarium
22
Lincoln Park Zoo
24
Magnificent Mile
26
The University of Chicago
28
Frank Lloyd Wright’s Oak Park
30
Moments in Chicago History
34
Skyscrapers
36
Niche Museums
38
Places to Eat
40
The information in this DK Eyewitness Top 10 Travel Guide is checked regularly. Every effort has been made to ensure that this book is as up-to-date as possible at the time of going to press. Some details, however, such as telephone numbers, opening hours, prices, gallery hanging arrangements and travel information are liable to change. The publishers cannot accept responsibility for any consequences arising from the use of this book, nor for any material on third party websites, and cannot guarantee that any website address in this book will be a suitable source of travel information. We value the views and suggestions of our readers very highly. Please write to: Publisher, DK Eyewitness Travel Guides, Dorling Kindersley, 80 Strand, London, Great Britain WC2R 0RL. COVER: Front – CORBIS: Jose Fuste Raga main; DK IMAGES: cl; Andrew Leyerle bl. Spine – DK IMAGES: Andrew Leyerle. Back – DK IMAGES: Andrew Leyerle tl, tc, tr.
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Ethnic Eats
42
Streetsmart
Bars & Clubs
44
Planning Your Trip
106
Blues & Jazz Joints
46
Arriving in Chicago
107
Arts Venues
48
Getting Around
108
Festivals & Events
50
Useful Information
109
Ethnic Neighborhoods
52
Kids’ Chicago
56
Chicago on a Budget
110
Shopping Destinations
58
Tours & Cruises
111
Film Locations
60
Parks & Beaches
62
Sights off the Beaten Track 64
Around Town
Contents
Left Frontera Grill Center Buddy Guy’s Legends Right Chicago Blues Festival
Tips on Health & Security 112 Shopping Tips
113
Accommodation & Dining Tips
114
Luxury Hotels
115
The Loop
68
Historic Hotels
116
Near North
78
Stylish Stays
117
Northside
84
Budget Sleeps
118
South Loop
92
Business-Friendly Stays
119
Far South
98
Index & Credits
120
Left Wave Swinger, Navy Pier Right Baha’i Temple, Wilmette Key to abbreviations Adm admission charge payable Free no admission charge DA disabled access
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CHICAGO’S TOP 10
The Art Institute of Chicago 8–11 Sears Tower & its Views 12–13 Field Museum 14–15 Museum of Science & Industry 16–19 Navy Pier 20–21 John G. Shedd Aquarium 22–23 Lincoln Park Zoo 24–25 Magnificent Mile 26–27 University of Chicago 28–29 Frank Lloyd Wright’s Oak Park 30–31 Top Ten of Everything 34–65
CHICAGO’S TOP 10
Chicago Highlights 6–7
Art Institute ! The of Chicago
Big-city sophistication combined with small-town hospitality create the perfect blend in this, the Midwest’s largest city. Chicago’s influential architecture, cuisine for every budget and taste, great shopping, diverse ethnic neighborhoods, and outstanding museums are reason enough for a visit. And the icing on the cake? The city boasts a lakefront and park system that are as beautiful as they are recreational.
This grande dame of Chicago’s art scene features world-renowned collections. The everpopular Impressionist section (see pp8–11) includes outstanding exhibits such as Renoir’s Acrobats at the Cirque Fernando.
Tower & its @ Sears Views
The city’s skyscraping superlative is actually made up of nine tube-like sections. The views (left) are absolutely awesome: on a clear day, you can see up to 40 miles (64 km) from the 103rd-floor Skydeck (see pp12–13).
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Top Ten Chicago
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and environments from ancient Egypt to modern Africa, via Midwestern wildlife, and the underground life of bugs. The Field also offers a closeup of the world’s largest and most complete Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton, as well as many other fossils (see pp14–15).
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only building left from the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition. Exhibits emphasizing interactivity cover everything from space exploration to coal-mining, including the Walk-Through Heart and Silver Streak train, which visitors can climb aboard (see pp16–19).
Pier % Navy Once dilapidated, this Lake Michigan pier is now a bustling yearround playground for kids and adults alike, complete with a Ferris Wheel and carousel. In warm weather, take a boat tour or join the throngs that stroll along the pier and get some amazing city views (see pp20–21).
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G. Shedd ^ John Aquarium Chicago’s amazing aquarium is located on the lakefront and is home to thousands of marine animals from big beluga whales to tiny seahorses. Get a fun, fish-eye view at the Oceanarium’s underwater viewing galleries (see pp22–3).
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of Science & Industry $ Museum An enduring family favorite, this museum is the
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zoos in the country and, after more than 100 years, still free. Kids love the hands-on Pritzker Family Children’s Zoo and Endangered Species Carousel (see pp24–5).
Top Ten Chicago
shopping destination is a four-lane stretch of North Michigan Avenue. It also has historic significance, claiming two of only a few structures to survive the 1871 Great Chicago Fire (see pp26–7).
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The University of Chicago
Opened in 1892, this private university is an important part of the southside Hyde Park neighborhood. Its public attractions include museums and galleries, and a Frank Lloyd Wright home (see pp28–9).
Lloyd ) Frank Wright’s Oak Park Frank Lloyd Wright, creator of Prairie Style architecture, was based in this Chicago suburb for 20 years. His legacy is an “outdoor museum” of 25 buildings. Take a self-guided or guided tour of his creations and those of other Prairie Style architects (see pp30–31).
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Chicago’s Top 10
The Art Institute of Chicago Guarded by iconic lions, and up a flight of grand stone steps (a favorite local meeting place) is the Midwest’s largest, and one of the USA’s best art museums. Housed in a massive Beaux Arts edifice (currently being renovated and expanded), the Institute has some 260,000 works from around the globe, and is famous for its Impressionist and Post-Impressionist works and touring shows.
Massive and mesmerizing, this painting took Georges Seurat two years to complete. The scene (below) is created from dots of color, based on his study of optical theory, later known as pointillism.
Top 10 Paintings
Main museum entrance
The Garden Restaurant is a lovely lunch stop. Alternatively, cross over to Cosi (116 S. Michigan Ave.) for great sandwiches. Join a free, hour-long introductory tour. Meet in gallery 100 (1 or 2pm daily) Don’t miss the reconstruction of the 1893 Stock Exchange Trading Room.
1 A Sunday on La Grande Jatte–1884 2 Acrobats at the Cirque Fernando 3 At the Moulin Rouge 4 Stacks of Wheat series 5 Paris Street; Rainy Day 6 Nighthawks 7 The Child’s Bath 8 The Old Guitarist 9 The Herring Net 0 American Gothic
at the @ Acrobats Cirque Fernando Children were often the subjects of Renoir’s sunny paintings: this luminous 1879 work shows a circus owner’s daughters taking a bow after their act.
In summer, catch live jazz in the Garden Restaurant (4:30– 7:30pm Thu) • 111 S. Michigan Ave. • Map L6 • El Station: Adams (Green, Orange, Purple, & Yellow lines) Monroe (Blue & Red lines) • 312-443-3600 • www.artic.edu • Open 10:30am–5pm Mon–Fri (to 8pm Thu); 10am–5pm Sat & Sun. • Adm: adults $12; students, seniors and children 12 yrs and older $7; under 12 yrs free; free adm 5–8pm Thu • DA (at both entrances)
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Sunday on La ! AGrande Jatte–1884
of $ Stacks Wheat series From 1890–91, Monet painted 30 views of the haystacks that stood outside his house at Giverny in France. This museum has six of them, which illustrate the basic Impressionist doctrine of capturing fleeting moments in nature.
the £ At Moulin Rouge Unlike many of his fellow Impressionists who painted serene, often natural scenes, Toulouse-Lautrec was drawn to the exuberant night- and lowlife of Paris. This dramatic composition (1892) celebrates the famous Moulin Rouge cabaret (above).
Street; % Paris Rainy Day Considered to be Gustave Caillebotte’s masterpiece, this evocative 1877 view down a Parisian boulevard, with life-sized figures in the foreground, perfectly captures the gray and rainy scene.
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century American Art, this 1942 painting by Realist Edward Hopper has a melancholy quality. It cleverly depicts fluorescent lighting, at the time a recent introduction to US cities.
Michigan Ave. entrance
Key to Floorplan Ground Level Main Level Upper Level
Chicago’s Top 10
^ Nighthawks One of the best-known images in 20th-
Child’s Bath & The The only American to
Old Guitarist Herring Net * The ( The A 22-year-old, strugWinslow Homer gling Picasso painted this tortured 1903 portrait during his Blue Period. This reflected his grief over a friend’s suicide and was a precursor to his own style of Cubism.
honed his realist skills as an illustrator for magazines and later for the Union during the Civil War. After moving to Maine, he created a series of images, including this one (1885), depicting man’s complex relationship with the sea.
Gothic ) American Grant Wood borrowed from the detailed style of Flemish Renaissance art to create this muchparodied painting (1930). Though perceived by many as satirical, the painting (left) celebrates rural American values.
exhibit in Paris with the Impressionists, Mary Cassatt is known for using then-unconventional techniques such as elevated vantage points. She often portrayed women and children as in this, her most famous painting (1892).
Museum Guide The Art Institute is building an addition to the museum as well as undergoing extensive renovations, all of which will be complete in 2009. The locations of works and the accessibility of specific galleries are subject to change, so if there is a particular work you would like to see, please call ahead first to ensure it is on view.
For more Chicago art galleries and museums See pp38–9
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Chicago’s Top 10
Left Ritual figure, Amerindian Art Center Thorne Miniature Rooms Right Exhibit, Asian Art
Collections Paintings ! European Arranged chronologically, and
spanning the Middle Age through 1950, this prodigious collection includes a significant array of Renaissance and Baroque art. However, its main draw is a body of nearly 400 Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings. Instrumental in its creation was Bertha Honoré Palmer who acquired over 40 Impressionist works (largely ignored in France at the time) for the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition.
@ This impressive holding conAmerican Arts
tains some 5,500 paintings and sculptures dating from the colonial period to 1950. In addition, paintings and works on paper are on loan from the Terra collection and there is a range of decorative arts, including furniture, glass, and ceramics from the 18th century
Floorplan
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Michigan Ave. entrance
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through to the present. The silver collection is especially noteworthy.
£ Architecture Given the city’s strong archi-
tectural heritage and focus, it is not surprising that Chicago’s Art Institute boasts an architecture and design department, one of only a few in the US. Sketches and drawings are accessible by appointment, and changing public displays feature models, drawings, and architectural pieces, such as a stained-glass window by Frank Lloyd Wright.
& $ Modern Contemporary Art
Vincent Van Gogh, Self-portrait (1886–7), European Paintings
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This important collection represents the significant arts movements in Europe and the US from 1950 to the present day, including a strong body of Surrealist works, and notable paintings by Picasso, Matisse, and Kandinsky, as well as showing how American artists, such as Georgia O’Keeffe, interpreted European Modernism. A limited number of artworks will be on view until 2009 while the galleries are being renovated.
For more on Modern Art in Chicago See pp79, 94–5, 101
% Photography Spanning the history
^
Chicago’s Top 10
of the medium, from its origins in 1839 to the present, this eminent collection was started by Georgia O’Keeffe in 1949 with the donation of works by Alfred Stieglitz. Many modern masters, including, Frank Lloyd Wright art glass, Architecture Julien Levy, Edward Weston, Paul Strand, and as well as horses. The items Eugène Atget, are represented. displayed originate from Europe, the United States, and the Asian Art Middle East, and date from the This sizeable collection covers 15th through the 19th centuries. 5,000 years and features Chinese Arthur Rubloff ceramics and jades, Japanese Paperweight Collection screens, and Southeast Asian sculpture. The museum’s assemThis fabulous and unusual blage of Japanese woodblock assemblage numbers in excess prints, such as Courtesan (c. 1710) of 1,400 paperweights, making by Kaigetsudo Anchi, is one of the it one of the largest of its kind in finest outside Japan. Look out, too, the world. It showcases colorful for the rare early 14th-century and exquisite examples from all scroll painting, Legends of periods, designs, and techthe Yuzu Nembutsu. niques. The paperweights mostly originate from 19th-century France, African & though some were Amerindian Art A variety of artifacts, made in America and including sculptures, the United Kingdom. masks, ceramics, Displays also reveal furniture, textiles, the secrets of how bead-, gold-, and metalpaperweights are made. work, make up this Clematis, Arthur Rubloff paperweight relatively small, but Thorne interesting collection. Miniature Rooms Narcissa Ward Thorne, a Chicago Exhibits from both continents art patron, combined her love of are arranged by region and miniatures with her interest in culture: ceremonial and ritual interiors and decorative arts to objects are particularly intriguing. create the 68 rooms in this unique Lilliputian installation. Some of Arms & Armor the 1 inch:1 foot scale rooms The Harding Collection of are replicas of specific historic Arms and Armor is one of the interiors, while others are period largest in America. On permanent recreations, combining features display are over 200 items copied from a variety of sites or related to the art of war including based on illustrations and other weapons, and complete and records of period furniture. partial suits of armor for men –
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Chicago’s Top 10
Sears Tower & its Views It might have lost the world’s tallest building slot to Taipei 101 Tower in Taiwan, thanks to its enormous spire, but Sears Tower (center, left) is still the tallest if measuring the height from ground to roof – a staggering 1,450 ft (442 m). Designed by Chicago firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, the tower uses nine exterior frame tubes, avoiding the need for interior supports. On a windy day, workers on higher levels can feel the building sway and hear squeaking noises: you might experience the same thing from the 103rd-floor Skydeck, where on a good day, the 360-degree views – the main draw for visitors – are awesome. Top 10 Views
Sears Tower
The tower has eight restaurants to choose from (open Mon–Fri). Take an audio Sky Tour to get “inside” information on Chicago at the Skydeck’s 16 viewing points. Check visibility levels at the security desk before you wait in line for the Skydeck. • 233 S. Wacker Dr. (note: entrance is on Jackson Blvd.) • 312-875-9696 • Map J4 • www.theskydeck.com • El Station: Quincy • Open May–Sep: 10am–10pm daily; Oct–Apr: 10am–8pm daily • Skydeck adm.: $11.95; children (3–11): $8.50; seniors: $9.95 • DA • Marina City: 300 N. State St. • Soldier Field: 425 E. McFetridge Dr. • United Center: 1901 W. Madison St. • McCormick Place: 2301 S. Lakeshore Dr.
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John Hancock Center Grant Park Soldier Field Navy Pier United Center Marina Towers Merchandise Mart McCormick Place Lake Michigan Chicago River
Hancock ! John Center The Sears Tower’s North Side counterpart is this 100-story skyscraper (right, center). It houses a retail area, offices, and apartments – as well as an open-air observatory on the 94th floor (see p79).
Park @ Grant Built entirely on landfill following the Great Chicago Fire (see p34) this 200-acre (81-ha) park (right) is the city’s largest and the site of summer music festivals (see p62).
Field £ Soldier Home to the Chicago Bears football team (see p51) for over 30 years, the 1924-built lakeside stadium (below) recently saw the addition of a controversial 63,000-seat structure. Critics have likened it to a padded toilet seat.
Center % United This vast indoor
turned fun-filled mecca, this is Chicago’s leading attraction (see pp20–21).
City ^ Marina When built in 1964, these distinctive 60-story buildings (nicknamed the corncobs), were both the tallest residential and the tallest concrete structures in the world (see p36).
Chicago’s Top 10
Pier $ Navy A former naval base
sports arena and concert venue (left) is also known as ‘the house that Michael built,’ as it was Michael Jordan’s fame that attracted the money to fund it. Outside the center there’s a statue of the nowretired, but ever-popular, basketball player.
Mart & Merchandise The largest (in floor area) commercial building in the world, this 1930built structure covers two blocks and was run by the Kennedy family until the late 1990s (see p79).
Top 10 Tower Facts
Place * McCormick The first convention center opened here in 1960 but burned down seven years later. Helmut Jahn built the second in 1971 at twice the size with 40,000 sprinkler heads. Three buildings now make up this complex, and are connected by a shop-lined promenade.
Michigan ( Lake This is the third
River ) Chicago Chicago’s 156-mile
largest of the five Great Lakes. Water temperatures struggle to hit tepid during summer, but many beach-goers swim nevertheless. On a clear day, you can often see across to the shores of Indiana and Michigan.
(251-km) long river (above) tops world records with its 52 opening bridges. An extraordinary engineering feat resulted in the reversal of the river flow in 1900 (see p34). Every St. Patrick’s day the main branch is dyed green.
1 It is 110 stories high 2 It weighs 222,500 tonnes 3 The tower took three years to construct 4 Building costs topped $150 million 5 It contains 2,000 miles (3,220 km) of electric cables… 6 … And 25,000 miles (40,233 km) of piping 7 25,000 people enter and exit each day 8 1.5 million people visit the Skydeck each year 9 The elevators travel at 1,600 ft (490 m) per minute 0 Six automatic machines wash its 16,100 windows
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Chicago’s Top 10
Field Museum Founded in 1893 to display items from the World’s Columbian Exposition, and renamed in 1905 to honor its first major benefactor, Marshall Field, this vast museum offers fascinating insights into global cultures and environments past and present. Home to all sorts of cultural treasures, fossils, and artifacts, as well as to myriad interactive exhibits, make no bones about it: this natural history museum is one of the best in the country.
! Sue A Tyrannosaurus rex, 13-ft (4-m) high by 42-ft (12.8-m) long – the largest, most complete, and best preserved ever found. Her real 600-lb (272-kg) skull, too heavy for the skeleton, is on view nearby.
Top 10 Exhibits
Museum façade
Grab a bite to eat under the watchful gaze of dinosaur Sue at the Corner Bakery on the main level.
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Sue Pacific Spirits Underground Adventure Lions of Tsavo Inside Ancient Egypt Grainger Hall of Gems Hall of Jades Africa Pawnee Earth Lodge Nature Walk
Two free trolley services link the Field, the Shedd (see p22–3) and the Art Institute (see p10–11) with the nearest Metra stations, CTA stations, and Downtown. Have a museumrelated question? Look out for attendants carrying a big “Ask Me” sign. • 1400 S Lake Shore Dr. • Map L5 • 312-922-9410 • www.fieldmuseum.org • Metra station: Roosevelt Road • Open 9am–5pm daily • Adm.: adults $12, children (4–11), seniors, and students with ID $7 • DA
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Pacific Spirits
@ A real celebration of vibrant Pacific islander culture: visitors can see dramatic masks (above), listen to recorded sounds from the swamps of New Guinea, and bang on an impressive 9-ft (3-m) drum.
£ Underground Adventure Enter this larger-than-life “subterranean” ecosystem to get a bug’s-eye view of life. Wander through a jungle of roots (right), and listen to the chatter of a busy ant colony. Extra admission charged.
of Tsavo $ Lions In 1898, these two partners in crime killed and ate 140 men constructing a bridge in Kenya, before they in turn were hunted and killed. The skins were first used as rugs, before being mounted as you see today.
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North entrance
Ancient % Inside Egypt
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South entrance East entrance
Key to Floorplan Ground Level Main Level Upper Level
Hall ^ Grainger of Gems
Chicago’s Top 10
This part-original, partreplica Egyptian ruin leads you up and down stairs, into Egyptian bedrooms and tombs, and even through a marketplace. Discover how Cleopatra lived and how mummies were wrapped.
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West entrance
Fiber-optic lighting illuminates over 500 glittering gems, precious stones, and minerals. Even though it’s a replica, the star of the show is the breathtaking Hope Diamond.
of Jades & Hall This impressive collection of over 500 jade artifacts includes items from Neolithic burial sites, the Chinese Dynasties and the early 20th century. Tools used to create them are also on display.
Museum Guide
* Africa Browse the wares of a Saharan market, experience life on a slave ship, and see a pair of fighting elephants (left): this exhibit offers an amazing journey through ancient and modern Africa.
Earth Lodge ( Pawnee This replica Pawnee dwelling is an interactive exhibit that showcases the traditions of the 19thcentury Pawnee Indians.
Walk ) Nature Stroll through wetland, woodland, and other habitat dioramas complete with stuffed wildlife striking perfect poses. A deer management computer game lets you play God with the fate of the animals.
The main entrance is located on the museum’s north side, though visitors typically enter on the south, where buses, trolleys, and cabs drop off. A third (ground level) west entrance is suitable for wheelchair access. If you visit on a weekday, it’s worth asking staff about the museum’s Free Highlights Tours, which take place twice daily. And don’t forget to look for information on the day’s special events, tours, and activities, posted throughout the building.
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Chicago’s Top 10
Museum of Science & Industry The cultural star of the city’s Far South, this museum was the first in North America to introduce interactive exhibits, with a record of innovative, hands-on displays dating back to the 1930s. More than one million visitors flock annually to this vast neoclassical building, which houses more than 800 exhibits and is a Chicago must-see, especially for families. Make sure you arrive rested, since it takes a whole day to hit just the top attractions.
This, the first manned spacecraft to orbit the moon, offers a genuine peek into the 1960s space race. The historic photos, space suits, and training module on display all help set the scene.
Top 10 Features 1 2 3 4 5 Great Hall entrance
The Brain Food Court serves above-average fare including woodfired pizzas, and made-to-order salads and sandwiches. Advance tickets reserved on the Internet or telephone cost an extra $2 each but are worth it on busy weekends. Additional Omnimax tickets can be bought for $6 (adults) and $5 (children 3–11) at all museum entrances. • 57th Street & Lake Shore Drive • Map F6 • 1-773-684-1414 • www.msichicago.org • Metra station: 55th/56th/57th • Open 9:30am–4pm Mon–Sat, 11am–4pm Sun • Adm.: adults $11, children (3–11) $7; including one Omnimax show: adults $17, children $12 • DA
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8 ! Apollo Command Module
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Apollo 8 Command Module The Great Train Story Walk-Through Heart The Coal Mine Colleen Moore’s Fairy Castle All Aboard the Silver Streak Yesterday’s Main Street Omnimax Theater Toy Maker 3000 U-505 Submarine
Great @ The Train Story Thirty-four miniature trains (below) race past skyscrapers, through prairies, and over the Rockies to the Pacific Docks on 1,425 ft (437 m) of track that replicates the 2,200mile (3540 km) train trip from Chicago to Seattle.
Heart £ Walk-Through A museum favorite since the 1940s, this 20-ft (6-m) tall model of the human heart would fit inside the chest of a 28-story person. Enter its chambers to see the marvel of human engineering.
Coal Mine $ The Venture down a simulated 600 ft (184 m) in an authentic shaft elevator to discover how coal was extracted in the 1930s compared to today. The mini train ride enhances the underground illusion.
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Colleen Moore’s Fairy Castle
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Great Hall entrance
Key to Floorplan Ground Level Main Level Upper Level
Aboard the ^ All Silver Streak
Chicago’s Top 10
Star of the silent screen, Colleen Moore commissioned the design of this lavish 9-sq-ft (0.8 sq-m) castle (left) and lovingly filled it with over 2,000 onetwelfth-scaled objects, including the world’s smallest Bible.
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Space Center entrance 8
Both Art Deco design afficionados and rail buffs alike are drawn to this streamlined, vintage Zephyr train with its ground-breaking dieselelectric engine. Onboard visits are by tour only.
& Yesterday’s Main Street A cobblestone, shoplined street gives a taste of 1910 Chicago, with a cinema screening free silent movies and a traditional ice-cream parlor serving sweet treats at present-day prices.
Museum Guide
Theater * Omnimax Films shown in this five-story theater make the viewers feel like they are right in the thick of the on-screen adventures. Films on a rotating program are screened about every 50 minutes.
3000 ( ToyMaker Twelve robotic arms work the assembly line to produce toy top after colorful top in this display of computer integrated manufacturing technology. You can race a robot to see who can trace letters faster, and souvenir tops come gratis.
Submarine ) U-505 Take a tour around this 1941 German Uboat: captured during World War II, it looks much as it did then, complete with an Enigma codebreaking machine.
The museumhas two main entrances – the Great Hall (ground level) and the Henry Crown Space Center entrance (for the Omnimax Theater). Head first to tour-only displays – the Silver Streak, U-505, and the Coal Mine – as later in the day waits for these can be more than an hour. If purchasing Omnimax tickets choose a later time, when you’ll truly appreciate sitting down. Strollers can be rented for $2 in the Great Hall.
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Chicago’s Top 10
Left Communications Zone Right Boeing 727, Transportation Zone
Exhibits Zone ! Transportation A full-size Boeing 727 and a
British World War II fighter plane dangle dramatically above a steam locomotive and the world’s fastest land vehicle, while visitors explore the forces of flight via computer games and videos.
@ Artifacts, archival footage, £ Genetics: Decoding Life
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Through the Ages & Ships Here, model ships chart marine
transportation from Egyptian sailboats through to modern ocean liners. Highlights include scale versions of Christopher Columbus’ three ships.
Planet * Petroleum The journey from pipe-
line to polymers is told from an oil molecule’s perspective, ending in a huge display of by-products, from running Boiler Clock shoes to chewing gum.
today’s farms and the modern technologies that get food from the field to your table. Children can ride in a real combine and take part in a cow-milking challenge.
% Networld The binary world of cyber-
space comes alive here via educational yet fun hands-on displays.
The War Within ^ AIDS: Replicas of enlarged human
cells vividly illustrate the in-depth workings of the HIV virus in this highly educational exhibit.
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and interactive challenges bring to life this restored U-505 German submarine. Optional on-board tours of the boat are available.
Farm $ The Learn about life on
Main Level
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Explore the complex and controversial world of genetics and genetic engineering and learn how cloning is possible, while viewing real cloned mice.
Museum Floorplan
Zone ( Communications The Whispering Gallery illus-
trates how sound-waves make even the faintest whisper audible at the other end of a room, while the World Live Theater lets visitors witness TV broadcasts being beamed in from around the world.
) Enterprise Interactive scenarios allow
visitors to climb into the shoes of a fictional CEO to lead a toy manufacturing company through important business decisions.
Top 10 Features of the 1893 Exposition
Built as the Palace of Fine Arts in 1893, the Museum of Science and Industry is now the only building left from Daniel Burnham’s vast “White City.” This was constructed for the World’s Columbian Exposition, which marked the 400th anniversary (albeit one year late) of Christopher Columbus’ arrival in the New World. Burnham, the Director of Works for the fair (see p37), commissioned architects like Charles Atwood to create structures that would showcase the best in design, culture, and technology. The Field A stone figure Museum (see pp14–15) inhabited on the Museum the building until the 1920s when it moved to its present-day Museum Campus home. Sears Roebuck retail chief Julius Rosenwald then decided that a fortified palace, stripped to its steel frame and rebuilt in limestone, would be the perfect home for a new museum devoted to “industrial enlightenment” and US technological achievements. Appropriately, the Museum debuted in 1933 when Chicago hosted its next World’s Fair, the Century of Progress Exposition.
Chicago’s Top 10
1 First ever Ferris Wheel 2 Palace of Fine Arts 3 Midway Plaisance, first separate amusement area at a world’s fair 4 Jackson Park, landscaped by designer Frederick Law Olmsted 5 Exotic Dancer “Little Egypt” in the “Streets of Cairo” exhibit 6 Nickname “Windy City” introduced (see p106) 7 A 1,500 lb (680 kg) chocolate Venus de Milo 8 A 70-ft- (21-m-) high tower of light bulbs 9 Floodlights used on buildings for the first time 0 250,000 separate displays on show.
The Museum’s Origins
The Restoration Although built to withstand fire, due to the value of its contents, the Palace of Fine Arts was originally intended as a post-Fair tear-down, so it needed massive reconstruction when Rosenwald decided to restore it to its former glory in the 1920s. The financial support of many local business men and the city of Chicago helped him to fulfill this dream.
The Museum as it stands today
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Chicago’s Top 10
Navy Pier As recently as 1995 Chicago’s Navy Pier was a drab slab of concrete projecting into Lake Michigan, formerly used as a military and freight terminal. But a huge effort to funnel locals and tourists onto the Pier has seen the installation of a variety of attractions on the waterfront – for kids as well as adults – that draw over eight million people annually, making this Chicago’s most visited attraction. An added bonus of spending time at the Pier: the breathtaking city views. Top 10 Exhibits
Navy Pier
Skip the chain eateries in favor of ribs and live jazz at Joe’s Be-Bop Café. In summer the beer garden at the far end of the Pier offers stellar city views as well as free bands. Join a 90-minute lake tour (see p111) on a four-masted schooner, or take a ride on a Seadog speedboat. Save money and time spent in line with a combination ticket for the Musical Carousel, Ferris Wheel, and Wave Swinger. • 600 E. Grand Avenue • Map M3 • 1-800-595-7437 • www.navypier.com • CTA Bus: 29; 65; 56; 66; 120; 121 • Open summer: 10am–10pm daily (to midnight Fri & Sat); Sep & Oct: 10am– 9pm Mon–Sat (to 11pm Fri & Sat), 10am–7pm Sun; winter: 10am–8pm Mon–Sat (to 10pm Fri & Sat), 10am–7pm Sun • Free entrance but many attractions charge • DA
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1 Wave Swinger 2 Chicago Children’s Museum 3 Skyline Stage 4 Smith Museum of Stained-Glass Windows 5 Musical Carousel 6 Ferris Wheel 7 Chicago Shakespeare Theater 8 IMAX® Theatre 9 Amazing Chicago’s Funhouse Maze 0 Miniature Golf Course
Swinger ! Wave Each of the 48 chainsuspended chairs on this colorful, old-fashioned thrill ride lifts riders 14 ft (5 m) in the air, and spins them until the skyline blurs (below).
Children’s @ Chicago Museum Kids love this hands-on museum that educates through play. Under-twos get dedicated spaces, including a water room, with clothing protection provided (see p56).
Skyline Stage £ Pepsi During the summer this unique 1500-seat theater, with its state-of-the-art acoustics, hosts ticketed pop, rock, folk, and jazz concerts against a stunning backdrop. Children’s theater, dance performances, and other live events are also staged in this intimate setting.
Museum of Stained-Glass Windows $ Smith The first museum of its kind in the USA, the Smith displays 150 artworks made of colored glass (above) along 800 ft (240 m) of the Pier’s interior corridors. Highlights include 13 pieces from Louis Comfort Tiffany’s workshop.
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Chicago’s Top 10
Wheel ^ Ferris It’s hard to miss Carousel % Musical A quaint merry-goround of 36 hand-painted horses and chariots located next to the Ferris Wheel replicates a similar ride installed on the Pier in the 1920s.
the Pier’s 15-story Ferris Wheel. The slowly and continually revolving ride seats six passengers in each of its 40 enclosed cars. Daytime rides offer fine lake views, while evening rides show off the magical city lights.
Shake& Chicago speare Theater This highly renowned theater aims to make the Bard accessible to the pleasure-seeking masses visiting Navy Pier. As well as Shakespearean standards, productions also include the “Short Shakespeare” series for younger audiences. ®
Theatre * IMAX The six-story, 80-ft(24-m) wide flatscreen movie theater offers celluloid fare ranging from scientific documentaries to Disney features. Sound and vision headsets aid 3D movie enjoyment.
Orientation
Chicago’s Funhouse Maze ( Amazing This mirror-filled, Chicago-themed walking maze leads you on a disorienting, 15-minute trip. Expect spinning lights, startling sound effects, and new perspectives on city sights.
Golf ) Miniature Course Putt your way around Pier Park via the 18 holes of this mini-golf course, situated at the base of the Pier’s Ferris Wheel. Each hole has a Chicago theme and the course is suitable for all ages.
Take public transit, a taxi, or walk to Navy Pier. If driving, there are over 1600 parking spaces right on the Pier. Once there, be sure to stop off at the Guest Services desk, just inside the main entrance, to pick up a schedule for details of the day’s events, including performance times and locations for the resident comedy troupe, brass band, and a capella singing group.
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Chicago’s Top 10
John G. Shedd Aquarium The eponymous John G. Shedd, president of Marshall Field’s department store (see p74), donated this Beaux Arts aquarium to Chicago in 1929. One of the city’s top attractions ever since, it houses some 25,500 m arine animals representing 2,100 different species that include amphibians, fish, and aquatic mammals. The latter romp in the saltwater of the 1991-built glass-walled Oceanarium, which places an infinity pool in front of Lake Michigan to transporting effect. Top 10 Exhibits
The Oceanarium
Choose one of three dining options at the Shedd: the sit-down Soundings serves upscale fare with stellar lake views; the Bubble Net Food Court offers pizzas, sandwiches, and burgers; or you can brown bag it at one of the picnic tables. Don’t miss the Shedd’s underwater viewing galleries.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
Caribbean Coral Reef Oceanarium Wild Reef Habitat Chats Waters of the World Special Exhibit Gallery Amazon Rising Animal Enounters 4-D Special FX Theater Oceanarium Shows
! Caribbean Coral Reef This vibrant tropical tank contains glinting tarpon, bonnethead sharks, fluttering rays, and many other fish. A scuba diver hand-feeds them six times daily (right), narrating his task via an underwater microphone.
Check out Jazzin’ at the Shedd on Thursdays (5–10pm, adm $10) from June through August. • 1200 S. Lake Shore Dr. • Map M6 • 312-939-2438 • www.sheddaquarium.org • El station: Roosevelt (Green, Orange, & Red lines) • Open summer (Memorial Day to Labor Day): 9am–6pm daily, (to 10pm Thu Jun–Aug); winter: 9am–5pm Mon– Fri, 9am–6pm Sat & Sun • Adm.: $23; children ( 3–11) & seniors $16. 4-D All-Access Pass: $27.50; children and seniors $20.50 • DA
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Reef £ Wild Gain a daring diver’s perspective of whitetip reef, blacktip reef, sandbar, and zebra sharks. The Sawfish and fearsome Lionfish (left) happily hold their own amid the predator school.
@ Oceanarium Underwater galleries afford incredible views of the likes of dolphins and beluga whales swimming through the Oceanarium’s vast pools. It is bordered by rocky outcrops and towering pines in an amazing re-creation of the Pacific Northwest coast.
Chats $ Habitat Oceanarium staffers hold daily discussions about the beluga whales, sea otters, and gentoo and rockhopper penguins in their charge. Twice daily there are also chats covering a changing roster of fish from the aquarium.
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Aquarium Plan Exhibit ^ Special Gallery This 3,600 sq ft (334 sq m) special exhibit gallery is located on the mezzanine level of the Oceanarium and features changing exhibits focused on aquatic animals.
Chicago’s Top 10
Themed tanks hold over 90 recreated aquatic habitats, including Ocean Coasts, Tropical Waters, and Africa, Asia, and Australia. An Australian lungfish, known as “Grandad”, has been a resident since 1933.
Rising & Amazon Demonstrating the huge seasonal tides of the world’s longest river, this exhibit presents a year in the life of the Amazon flood plain. Look out for the ferocious redbellied piranha (above).
Enounters Special FX * Animal ( 4-D Theater Get up close and personal with Chilean rose tarantulas, African bullfrogs, and red-tailed boas in handler-controlled encounters, twice daily.
The whole family will enjoy this hi-tech theater experience. The “special FX seats” bombard the spectator with bubbles, wind, smells, sounds, and all manner of surprises.
) Oceanarium Shows Four or five times a day trainers put the belugas (left) and dolphins through their paces. Children are chosen from the audience to reward the animals’ intrepid feats (such as tailwalking, and vocalizing) with tasty treats.
Aquarium Guide Consult the day’s event schedule – which is printed on the map you’re given – to get the most out of your visit. Try to arrive 10–15 minutes early for an Oceanarium Show to get the best seats, and remember that the 20–30 minute Habitat Chats often follow the shows. There are special events for the little ones on Tuesdays – call the Aquarium for more information.
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Chicago’s Top 10
Lincoln Park Zoo Chicago’s second most popular attraction after Navy Pier, this menagerie is not only one of the oldest zoos in the country but also one of the last not to charge admission. Established in 1868 with just a pair of swans, its age helps to account for how well integrated it is with the surrounding North Side community. While small compared to lots of top US zoos, it is a leading light for ape research, and its park setting, duck ponds, historic café, and landmark red barn endear it to all who visit.
recently remodeled pool is the underwater viewing window through which zoo-goers can spy the beautiful sibling bears pawing their way through the water (below).
Top 10 Exhibits
Entrance, Lincoln Park Zoo
Check out the Mexican fare year round at the Park Place Café. In summer, grab a pizza at the historic Café Brauer, which also has a beer garden – rare in the usually alcohol-free Chicago parks. Have any animalrelated questions? If so, ask staffers at the “Discovery Carts” located all around the zoo. • 2200 N. Cannon Drive • Map F3 • 312-742-2000 • www.lpzoo.org • CTA bus 151; 156 • Grounds open: 9am– 6pm daily. • Buildings open summer & fall: 10am– 5pm daily (summer: to 6:30pm Sat, Sun & hols); winter: 10am–4:30pm daily • Adm: free but $2 charge for Endangered Species Carousel • Parking: $12 • DA
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Bear Pool ! Polar The highlight of this
1 Polar Bear Pool 2 Small MammalReptile House 3 Regenstein African Journey 4 Endangered Species Carousel 5 Regenstein Center for African Apes 6 Bird House 7 Pritzker Family Children’s Zoo 8 Lion House 9 Sea Lion Pool 0 Farm-in-the-Zoo
Mammal@ Small Reptile House Replicating the warm climes of South America, Asia, Africa, and Australia, this exhibit introduces the exotic worlds of animals such as snakes (below).
African £ Regenstein Journey Elephants, rhinos, hippos, giraffes, and wild dogs are among the many animals to roam this expansive exhibit. Begin your walking adventure and experience total immersion in the sights and sounds of the varied African landscape around you.
Species $ Endangered Carousel Ride a wooden tiger or a bamboo-munching panda on this tent-topped merry-goround devoted to almost 50 endangered species, many of which are represented in the zoo itself. Admission is charged for this attraction.
For information on the neighboring Lincoln Park Conservatory See p86
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Chicago’s Top 10
Simulating the natural habitat of chimps and gorillas, this exhibit offers huge indoor, trilevel spaces rigged with lifelike trees and vines, as well as an outdoor yard for use in summer.
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House * Lion This 1912 structure stands out not only for its grand architecture but also the grand inhabitants. Many kinds of big cats, including Siberian Tigers, prowl – and roar – both inside the hall and in outdoor enclosures.
Lion Pool ( Sea Despite the name, harbor and gray seals inhabit this pool. Watch them play at the pool’s edge or through an underground viewing window. Try to catch the 2pm feeding session (above).
) Farm-in-the-Zoo Presented by
John Deere
Keeping city kids in touch with their Midwestern roots, this exhibit offers a daily roster of activities such as goat-milking, cow-feeding, and butterchurning, and the chance to see chicks being born.
Children of all ages can feel “at home in the woods” while visiting animals native to North America, including Black Bears and Spotted Turtles.
Visitor Guide Stop by the Gateway Pavilion, just inside the east gate, when you arrive at the zoo. There, you can pick up a free visitor guide to find out about feeding times and special events. Staff are on hand here to provide extra information about any new animal arrivals or exhibits. Parking facilities, lockers, strollers, and wheelchairs are also available there.
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Chicago’s Top 10
Magnificent Mile This glitzy strip of stores and striking buildings runs for, you guessed it, about a mile (1.6 km), along North Michigan Avenue. A sharp developer came up with the “magnificent” moniker in 1947, and it has stuck ever since. Often known as the Mag Mile, it is home to big-guns department stores like Neiman Marcus, as well as high-end boutiques such as Tiffany & Co, and popular chain stores (Gap et al). The strip is at its best around Christmas when twinkling trimmings provide welcome relief from the often gray days.
became an instant glamor hot spot when it opened on New Year’s Eve in 1920. Marilyn Monroe was among the many stars who have graced it with their presence. High tea in the lobby café is a real treat (see p115).
Top 10 Features 1 2 3 4
North Michigan Ave. Bridge
Choose from a wide range of high-end, global, fast food at Foodlife food court in Water Tower Place. The Pumping Station has a visitor center and a Hot Tix booth (open 10am–6pm Tue–Sat, 11am–4pm Sun) for reduced same-day theater tickets (see p80). • Map L2–3 • Visitor Information 312-642-3570 • www.themagnificent mile.com • El Station: Grand/State; Chicago/State • Water Tower Place Mall: 835 N. Michigan Ave., 312-440-3166, open 10am–8pm Mon–Thu, 10am–10pm Fri, 8am– 10pm Sat, 12–6pm Sun • Garrett Popcorn Shop: 670 N. Michigan Ave., 312-944-2630, hours vary
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The Drake Hotel John Hancock Center Water Tower Place Historic Water Tower & Pumping Station American Girl Place Hershey’s Chicago Garrett Popcorn Shop Hotel Intercontinental Tibune Tower Wrigley Building
Hancock @ John Center When this sleek 100-story building was built in 1970, it was the world’s tallest. Exhilarating views of Chicago and beyond are afforded by the 94th-floor observatory and adjoining open-air area, the Skywalk (see pp76–7).
Tower Place £ Water Housing one of the city’s busiest shopping malls, this multi-use complex is one of the world’s tallest reinforced concrete buildings. Its 100plus shops include branches of Macy’s and Lord & Taylor department stores.
Water Tower $ Historic & Pumping Station Dwarfed by the surrounding skyscrapers, these structures are among the few that survived the Great Fire of 1871. The water tower (left) now contains an art gallery, while the pumping station still functions and also houses a visitor center (see p80).
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Chicago’s Top 10
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largest chocolate manufacturer offers a themed retail experience in its Chicago store. Old favorites such as Hershey’s Reese’s and Kit Kat are on sale alongside the latest new products (see p81).
Popcorn & Garrett Shop A Chicago fixture since 1949, this beloved popcorn shop seduces mind-boggling numbers of people, who snake through its huge lines to get their bag of caramel, cheese, buttered or plain.
Tower ( Tribune The result of a design
Inter* Hotel Continental Built in 1929 as a luxury club for the all-male Shrine association, this amazing hotel (see p115) reveals a range of flamboyant architectural styles in its public spaces. Take a self-guided tour to see the highlights, including the stunning swimming pool (above).
competition organized by the Chicago Tribune newspaper, this Gothic tower (above, right) is either adored or abhorred by locals. Either way, it’s a dramatic Mag Mile landmark (see p80).
Building ) Wrigley The two towers of the former Wrigley headquarters add to Michigan Avenue’s exciting skyline (above left). At night, colored lights illuminate them, as they have done since the building opened in 1921 (see p61).
Bridge to Success The North Michigan Avenue bascule bridge, built in 1920, was the first of its kind in the world. Instrumental in Chicago’s northward expansion, it provides a fitting gateway to the city’s main retail artery – the Mag Mile. The southwest tower houses the McCormick Tribune Bridgehouse and River Museum, which details the history of Chicago River and displays the interworkings of this landmark drawbridge.
27
With Chicago’s expansion in the late 19th century, a major university was the perfect addition to an array of new cultural institutions. Funded by oil magnate John D. Rockefeller, (who deemed it his best ever investment) the forward-thinking institution opened in 1892. Today, the university is one of the USA’s most respected, boasting 78 Nobel prize winners as students, faculty, or researchers, as well as several on-campus attractions that are destinations in their own right. Top 10 Features
Cobb Gate
• 5801 S. Ellis Ave. • 1-773-702-1234 • www.uchicago.edu • Map E6 • Metra Station: 55th/56th/57th Sts.; 59th St. • Bond Chapel: open 8am–4:45pm daily, Free, • Smart Museum of Art: open 10am–4pm Tue–Fri (to 8pm Thu); 11am–5pm Sat & Sun, Jun–Sep, Free • Cobb Hall: Renaissance society open 10am–5pm Tue-Fri, noon–5pm Sat & Sun, Free • Rockefeller Memorial Chapel: open 8am–4pm daily (except during services), Free • Regenstein Library: special collections exhibits open to the public 8:30am–4:45pm Mon–Fri, Sat 9am– 12.45pm term-time, Free
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Institute ! Oriental The institute’s amazing museum (see p99) has five galleries that showcase the history, art, and archaeology of the ancient Near East. Don’t miss the Egyptian Gallery’s towering 17-ft (5.2-m) statue of King Tutankhamun (right).
Chapel @ Bond Built in 1926, this small, ivy-covered chapel features exterior stone carvings of angels, imps, and Adam and Eve. Inside, stainedglass windows illustrate scenes from the New Testament (below).
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Chicago’s Top 10
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Museum £ Smart of Art Magazine moguls David and Alfred Smart founded this museum in 1974. It might be small, but its contents (ranging from ancient ceramics to 20thcentury sculpture) pack an impressive punch.
Quadrangle $ Main Rejecting post-Civil War modernity, Henry Ives Cobb’s 1891 campus plan mimics England’s Gothic Oxford University, with this main unifying quad surrounded by smaller ones.
Unless otherwise stated, all attractions have Disabled Access.
House % Robie Frank Lloyd Wright described
Gate ^ Cobb This ornate northern entrance to the Main Quad is adorned with gargoyles. University lore says they represent students’ four years of college life: from struggling freshman at the base to graduation at the apex.
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Library ) Regenstein The 1970-built limestone “Reg,” (above) honors Chicago industrialist Joseph Regenstein. Exceptional jazz archives, map collections, and children’s books feature among its seven million plus volumes.
Chicago’s Top 10
his striking low-rise, Prairie-style masterpiece as “the cornerstone of modern architecture.” The not-sohumble architect built it in 1909 for bicycle manufacturer Frederick C. Robie (see p100).
* Rockefeller Memorial Chapel The tallest building on campus is this minicathedral named for university patron John D. Rockefeller. It boasts magnficent stained glass, a 72-bell carillon (the world’s second largest), and a 10,000-pipe organ.
Top 10 Alumni 1 Milton Friedman (1912–2006), economist 2 James D. Watson, (1928–), scientist 3 Philip Glass (1937–), composer/musician 4 Edwin Hubble (1889– 1953), astronomer 5 Susan Sontag (1933– 2005), critic/author 6 Eliot Ness (1903–57), author/law enforcer 7 John Ashcroft (1942–), US Attorney General 8 Philip Roth (1933–), author 9 Carl Sagan (1934–96), astronomer/author 0 Studs Terkel (1912–), oral historian
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Chicago’s Top 10
Frank Lloyd Wright’s Oak Park This quiet suburb, seven miles (11 km) west of downtown Chicago, contains the world’s largest collection of Frank Lloyd Wright-designed buildings. It was here that Wright developed his Prairie style, (inspired by the flat lines of the Midwestern plains), influencing other architects such as George Maher. His work was first considered radical, even ugly, compared to the typical styles of the day. Walking through Oak Park’s quaint, tree-lined streets, it’s evident that Wright’s unique architecture does stand out from the norm – but in all the right ways. Top 10 Buildings
Detail of house in Oak Park designed by Wright
Dine Italian at familyrun La Bella Pasteria (1103 South Blvd., 1-708-524-0044) The Visitors’ Center sells maps, books, and tickets for area tours (158 N. Forest Ave., 1-708-848-1500) • Map A5 • El Station: Oak Park • Frank Lloyd Wright Home & Studio, 951 Chicago Avenue, 1-708848-1976, www.wright plus.org, open daily, tour times vary, no DA • Unity Temple, 875 West Lake Street • Pleasant Home, 217 South Home Avenue • Arthur Heurtley House, 318 Forest Avenue • The Bootleg Houses, 1019/1027/1031 Chicago Avenue • Charles Matthews House, 432 North Kenilworth Avenue • Edwin Cheney House, 520 North East Avenue • Beachy House, 238 Forest Avenue • Nathan Moore House, 333 Forest Avenue • Harry Adams House, 710 Augusta Boulevard
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1 Unity Temple 2 Frank Lloyd Wright Home & Studio 3 Pleasant Home 4 Arthur Heurtley House 5 Beachy House 6 Charles Matthews House 7 Edwin Cheney House 8 The Bootleg Houses 9 Nathan Moore House 0 Harry Adams House
Temple ! Unity This compact church (1908) wonderfully demonstrates Wright’s use of poured concrete for both structural and decorative purposes (right).
Home £ Pleasant This 30-room Prairie-style
Lloyd Wright @ Frank Home & Studio
1897 home built by George Maher, was Oak Park’s first to have electricity. It holds a small history museum, including exhibits relating to Tarzan creator and former local resident, Edgar Rice Burroughs.
Built when Wright moved to Oak Park (1889), this is where he designed over 150 structures (above). The children’s playroom is luminous with signature art-glass windows.
Heurtley House $ Arthur Wright’s beautiful 1902 house (above) is absolute Prairie, with its low, wide chimney, and band of art-glass windows that makes the over-hanging roof appear to float.
For detailed information on opening hours call the Visitors’ Center. Most buildings open to the public are visited by tour only.
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^ Charles Matthews House Architects Thomas Eddy Tallmadge and Vernon S. Watson designed this elegant 1909 Prairie-style residence for a wealthy druggist. Among the interior details are Prairieinspired light fixtures and folding art-glass doors.
Chicago’s Top 10
1906 home that contradicts many of Wright’s trademarks. Instead of just stucco and wood or brick and concrete, he used them all: it also has a sevengabled, rather than a hipped, roof.
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Bootleg * The Houses Wright lost his job over these three private commissions, built while he was actually employed by Louis Sullivan (see p37). Though Queen Anne-like in style, they hint at the design elements that were to be his hallmarks.
Moore ( Nathan House Out of financial desperation, Wright built this charming Tudor-style home (above) for his neighbor. After a fire destroyed the top floors in 1922, Wright’s modifications echoed his West Coast concrete block houses.
Adams ) Harry House This striking 1913 home marks the last of Wright’s Oak Park houses and features several of the elements that made him famous, such as exquisite stained glass, and a low overhanging roof.
Frank Lloyd Wright After moving to Oak Park in 1889, Wright (1867– 1959) appeared to lead the perfect suburban life. But in the early 20th century he created scandals by galavanting with married women, and wearing flamboyant clothes and long hair. During the Depression, however, he transformed into a respected social visionary, and later redefined himself as a quick-witted sage. Ultimately, though, he became a master of self-promotion, establishing himself as the first celebrity architect.
Literary buffs take note: Ernest Hemingway’s Oak Park birthplace is open to the public (339 N.Oak Park Ave., 1-708-848-2222)
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Chicago’s Top 10
Great Chicago Fire of 1871
Moments in Chicago History Great Chicago Fire ! 1871: Over 250 people died and
17,000 buildings were destroyed in this fire, allegedly started by a cow kicking over a lantern. Just a few buildings survived, including the Historic Water Tower and Pumping Station (see p80).
First Skyscraper @ 1885: Though just a measly – by
today’s standards – nine stories, the Home Insurance Building (now demolished) was the tallest of its time. William LeBarron Jenney achieved this architectural feat by designing the first weight-bearing steel frame. From then on, the only way was up.
Jackson Park (see p62) to transport visitors to the World’s Columbian Exposition (see p19).
Reversal of the % 1900: Chicago River
With sewage flowing downriver to Lake Michigan, the source of the city’s drinking water, thousands of Chicagoans were dying from the contamination. To solve the problem, engineers created a canal that forced the river to flow away from the lake: an extraordinary feat of modern engineering.
Chicago ^ 1919: Black Sox Scandal
The Chicago White Sox was a winning baseball 1886: Haymarket team but poorly paid, so Riot players sometimes fixed games, pocketing money Wealthy industrialists funded amazing Chicago Al Capone from gamblers. After a group of players conspired arts institutions, but their to lose the 1919 World Series, workers toiled long hours in eight of them were indicted, abominable conditions. In May acquitted for insufficient 1886, a labor protest ended in an evidence, but banned for life explosion at Haymarket Square from baseball – and forever that killed eight policemen and nicknamed the “Black Sox.” two bystanders. Eight anarchists were convicted of murder, 1929: Valentine’s though three were later parDay Massacre doned for lack of evidence. This brutal murder of seven of Al 1892: First Elevated Train Capone’s rival gangsters is one of The first train traveled just history’s most notorious mas3.6 miles (5.8 km) along tracks sacres. Capone set up a sting built above city-owned alleys, that sent George “Bugsy” (avoiding the need to negotiate Moran’s main men to a nearby with private property owners). By garage. There, Capone’s hench1893, the line was extended to men, dressed as police officers,
#
&
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34
Previous Pages Skyscrapers, Chicago
Top 10 Residents Baptiste ! Jean Point du Sable
Addams @ Jane This social activist (1860– 1935) founded Hull House social center (see p95) and won a Nobel Peace Prize.
The Chicago White Sox in 1919
lined them up and riddled them with bullets. Seven bushes now mark the spot (at Clark Street and Dickens Avenue).
First atom split * 1942: Under the football stands on
the campus of the University of Chicago (see pp28–9) Enrico Fermi made history. He supervised the creation of a primitive nuclear reactor and took the first major step in understanding how to build an atomic bomb.
First McDonald’s ( 1955: franchise opens
Ray Kroc, a milkshake mixer salesman, changed diets worldwide by convincing Dick and Mac McDonald’s to franchise their San Bernadino, California burger stand. The original restaurant in Des Plaines – 15 miles (24 km) west of Chicago – is now a museum.
)
1983: Harold Washington elected Mayor
Chicago’s first African-American Mayor, Washington tragically died of a heart attack shortly into his second term. His accomplishments included the expansion of O’Hare International Airport and the creation of a new central library (see p69).
Sandburg # Carl One of Chicago’s nicknames “City of big shoulders,” was penned by this author/poet (1878–1967).
Chicago’s Top 10
Chicago’s first non-native settler was an AfricanAmerican trader who set up camp around 1779.
Capone $ Al America’s best-known mobster (1899–1947) was Chicago’s “Public Enemy Number One” until jailed in 1931 for tax evasion.
Hemingway % Ernest Born in Oak Park, this hardliving author (1899–1947) left the suburb of “wide lawns and narrow minds” at age 19.
J. Daley ^ Richard This effective, if corrupt, Chicago mayor (1902–76) served longer than any other.
Goodman & Benny Born to poor RussianJewish immigrants, jazz great Goodman (1909–86) earned the title “King of Swing.”
Hefner * Hugh Lothario and founder of Playboy (1926–), whose first issue sold over 50,000 copies.
Mayfield ( Curtis Soul musician and social activist (1942–99), Mayfield had his first hit For Your Precious Love at age 17.
Winfrey ) Oprah TV’s talk-show darling (1954–) has filmed in Chicago since 1984 and become an honorary native of the city.
35
Chicago’s Top 10
Left 333 W. Wacker Drive Center Art glass, Auditorium Theatre Right 860–80 N. Lakeshore Drive
Skyscrapers Rookery ! The One of the earliest remaining skyscrapers, this 1888 Chicago landmark (see p70) combines traditional wall-bearing and newer steel frame construction. The latter made it possible for its architects, Burnham and Root, to design an open interior, with office spaces set around a central light well.
Theatre @ Auditorium Built by Adler and Sullivan in
1889, the ornate Auditorium also originally contained a hotel and office building and had one of the first public air-conditioning systems. The revamped 4,000seat theater boasts near-perfect acoustics. d 50 E.Congress Pkwy. •
Map K5 • For tours call 312-431-2354
Building # Monadnock Constructed in two stages, this Loop edifice represents the evolution of skyscraper architecture. The northern half was built in 1891 using solely wall-
bearing construction, while the southern half was built two years later and incorporated the then emerging steel-frame technology that is still used today (see p72).
Building $ Reliance The steel skeleton on this
1895-built skyscraper allowed it to be wrapped in glass. It offers an excellent example of the Chicago window, which is characterized by a bay window placed between two narrow, doublehung windows – a signature feature of the Chicago school of architecture. Occupied by the Hotel Burnham (see p116) the interior sports replicas of original features (see p72).
N. Lakeshore Drive % 860–80 You might think these two
highrise apartment buildings (1949–51) look like many others along this tony strip. Actually, the others look like these. German architect Mies van der Rohe perfected the “less is more” approach which so many other architects went on to copy.
City ^ Marina With its twin cylindrical struc-
Detail of staircase, Monadnock Building
36
tures (1959–64) on the Chicago River, Marina City is a “city within a city,” containing offices, residences, a theater, a grocery store, and more. The apartments start on the 21st floor, affording spectacular views, but their slice-of-pie shape creates some interior decorating challenges.
Top 10 Architects Le ! William Baron Jenney
Burnham @ Daniel Visionary city planner and architect, Burnham (1846– 1912) was the man behind the White City (see p19). The Rookery
Tower & Sears This soaring tower, built in
1974 as the headquarters of retailer Sears Roebuck and Co. (who have since moved out), can be seen from almost anywhere in the city. Its Skydeck affords sensational views (see pp12–13).
W. Wacker Drive * 333 The graceful curve of this
triangular, tinted-glass office building (1983) hugs the Chicago River. The water, together with the changing light and clouds create dynamic reflections: the green and silver lobby continues the shimmering show. d Map K3
R. Thompson Center ( James From inside the circular
atrium of this magnificent 17story building (1985), a quick glance up is almost dizzying. Take the elevator to the top for an impressive view of the stunning marble rosette on the concourse level (see p70).
Transportation ) Ogilvie Center
Rising 40 stories in waves of glass and steel is this striking 1996-rebuilt commuter train station (aka the Northwestern Station). Its streamlined façade mimics a vintage luxury train.
Holabird & # William Martin Roche This influential team (Holabird 1854–1923; Roche 1855–1927) developed early Chicago-style skyscrapers including the Marquette Building (see p72).
Chicago’s Top 10
The “father of the skyscraper” (1832–1907) who designed the first all-metal-framed structure in 1885 (see p34).
H. Sullivan $ Louis The creator (1856–1924) of the “form follows function” doctrine designed according to a building’s intended use.
Lloyd Wright % Frank Inspired by the wide open spaces of the Midwest, Wright (see pp30–31) was the originator of the Prairie style.
Maher ^ George A Prairie School architect (1864–1926) who favored Arts and Crafts motifs.
Burley Griffin & Walter Another Prairie–style architect (1876–1937) with a namesake historic district on Chicago’s Southside.
Mies van * Ludwig der Rohe Minimalist architect (1886– 1969) and creator of the modern glass-and-steel box.
Goldberg ( Bertrand A pupil of Mies van der Rohe who rebelled to produce curvilinear concrete shapes.
Weese ) Harry A Modernist (1915–98), but one sympathetic to existing buildings of merit.
d 500 W. Madison St. • Map J4 For other examples of notable Chicago architecture See pp72-3
37
Chicago’s Top 10
Left Exhibit, National Vietnam Veterans Art Museum Right Jane Addams Hull House
Niche Museums Museum ! National of Mexican Art
The largest Latino museum in the US explores the culture sin fronteras (without boundaries), showcasing works from both Mexico and Mexican-American communities. Pre-Columbian ceramics, Day of the Dead candelabras, and prints by such luminaries as Diego Rivera are highlights of the permanent collection. d 1852 W. 19th St • Map B5 • 10am–5pm Tue–Sun • Free • DA
of Broadcast @ Museum Communications
# Swedish–American Museum Center
Located in Andersonville, the historic neighborhood of Scandinavian immigrants, this tiny museum’s permanent collection of personal items brought over by early settlers is supplemented by temporary exhibitions on Swedish culture. An interactive children’s museum on the third floor brings the immigrant journey to life. d 5211 N. Clark St. • Map K2 • 10am– 4pm Tue–Fri, 11am–4pm Sat & Sun • Adm.: $4; children, seniors, students $3 • DA
Dedicated to the culture Exhibit, Museum of and history of news and Museum of Broadcast Communications entertainment media, Holography this museum archives The art really jumps out over 70,000 radio and television at you in this quirky loft devoted programs and commercials. In to all kinds of laser-produced addition to watching and hearing 3-D images. Exhibits relating to vintage tapes, visitors can anchor the technology employed explain their own newscast and read how holographs are produced. d from a teleprompter. d 400 N. 1134 W. Washington St. • Map J4
$
State St. • Map K3 • Open late spring 2007 • DA
• 12:30–5pm Wed–Sun • Adm.: $4; children 6–12 $3; under 6 free • DA
Peace Museum % The Art, history, and politics as
seen through a pacifist’s prism: the Peace Museum houses a 10,000-item collection, including sculpture, banners, and lithographs. Rotating exhibits cover themes such as 20th-century peace movements, the AIDS quilt, and art from Japanese A-bomb survivors. Work by Jesus Helguera, National Museum of Mexican Art
38
d 100 N. Central Park Ave. • Map B5 • 1–6pm, Thu–Sat, noon–4pm Sun • Donation • No DA
N. Lake Shore Dr. • Map F4 • 10am–4pm, Tue–Sun May–Sep, Tue–Sat Oct–Apr • Adm.: $8; students and seniors $4 • DA
Vietnam ( National Veterans Art Museum
Veterans of the Vietnam War, both US and Vietnamese, have contributed to the vast and moving collection of artworks cataloged by this thought-provoking museum. Some 130 artists created 1,000 works in pen, paint, clay, and word testifying to war’s horrors (see p94).
Hope and Help, International Museum of Surgical Science
Museum ^ Spertus Here, Judaica in forms rang-
ing from cartoons to ancient Torah scrolls comprise a lively, multifaceted retelling of Jewish history and culture. The museum’s Zell Holocaust Memorial was the first such permanent installation in the US, while the Artifact Center gets kids involved in unearthing the past in a hands-on “archeological dig”. d 618 S. Michigan Ave. •
Addams Hull House ) Jane Nobel Peace Prize-winning
social reformer Jane Addams worked her good on Chicago’s immigrant population from these two Victorian houses. In addition to her original art and furniture, Hull House stages temporary exhibits relating to the social settlement that brought day care, counseling, and education to the working class (see p95).
Map L6 • 10am–5pm Sun–Thu (7pm Thu), 10am–3pm Fri • Adm., Free Fri • Kosher Café and Children’s Center • DA
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Named for Jean Baptiste Point du Sable, Chicago’s first settler (who was of African descent), this museum chronicles the AfricanAmerican experience. There is a powerful exhibit on slavery, complete with shackles, while temporary displays cover topics such as early black millionaires, African hair art, and the Kwanzaa holiday celebration (see p99).
Chicago’s Top 10
displaying historic instruments that span 4,000 years of surgery. Murals and sculptures pay tribute to the profession. Stronger stomachs may appreciate the ancient Peruvian skulls showing evidence of early surgical attempts. d 1524
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39
Chicago’s Top 10
Left Lou Mitchell’s Right Blackbird
Places to Eat Trotter’s ! Charlie One of Chicago’s top
experience try the burgers next door at Hugo’s Frog Bar.
gourmet eateries, and one of the nation’s best, Charlie Trotter’s serves the exquisite and rarefied fare of its eponymous chef. The menu changes daily but expect creations such as venison loin with semolina cake, braised kale, and Niçoise olive boudin. Reservations must be made many weeks in advance though a lastminute call often turns up a table due to cancellations (see p91).
@ Ambria With its Art Nouveau
Gibson’s exudes a good time. A regular crowd of politicians, sports figures, and conventioneers packs the place nightly. The steakhouse fare is in every way a match to the atmosphere – big and bold. Huge lobster tails vie for attention with large slabs of beef. A reservation is critical, but for a more casual, walk-in
40
$ Blackbird Foodies and the fashion set
both agree on Blackbird, an eatery that sports minimalist decor and shoves the tables so close together that eavesdropping becomes part of the experience. Chef Paul Kahan generates the buzz, preparing sophisticated American dishes with French leanings. Menus change seaonDeep Dish Pizza, ally but reservations are Pizzeria Uno perennially a must.
detailing, cozy leather banquettes, and dark woods, Ambria is among the city’s most romantic dining options. And the dining experience matches the style here as chef Gabino Soltelino prepares contemporary French meals with a sophisticated understatement. Service is formal and the sommelier is one of the best in Chicago (see p91).
Steakhouse # Gibson’s Boisterous and convivial,
d 1028 N. Rush St. • Map L2 • 312266-8999 • $$$$
d 619 W. Randolph St. • Map J4 • 312715-0708 • Lunch 11.30am–2pm Mon–Fri, closed Sun • $$$$
Pond Café % North Hidden from the road in
leafy Lincoln Park, North Pond is a treasure – once you find it. Lodged in an Arts-and-Craftsstyle building, the café offers a seasonal menu with an emphasis on produce sourced in the Midwest. Though dinner is the star, lunches of sandwiches, soups, and salads are equally creative and well presented (see p91).
^ Spring Spring brings the sort of fine
cooking you’d expect only to find downtown out to Northside’s bohemian Wicker Park. Occupying a former bathhouse, the sunken
For key to price categories See p75
North Ave. • Map F4 • 1-773-395-7100 • Dinner only, closed Mon • $$$$
Francesca & Mia The hearty, rustic fare of
Rome and its surrounding regions distinguishes Mia Francesca from the Italian pack. Large portions and reasonable prices help draw legions of fans to this Wrigleyville rave. A former candy shop, the storefront eatery is casual but Gibson’s Steakhouse stylish with paper-topped tables and black-and-white photos of Lou Mitchell’s rural life on the walls. Lines form A classic diner in the Loop early and often (see p91). where the waitresses call you “Honey” and the coffee is bottomless, Lou Mitchell’s has Frontera Grill been around since 1923. Its trekSignature restaurant of chef worthy meal is breakfast, highRick Bayless, Frontera Grill is lighted by double-yolk eggs and credited with bringing authentic homemade hash browns served regional Mexican food – rather in a skillet. Tables turn quickly than Tex-Mex taco fare – stateside. and the staff doles out free Chili-roasted salsas and rich moles donuts and candy to those waitaccompany grilled meats and deliing on line with good cheer. cious seafood. Since reservations d 565 W. Jackson Blvd. • Map J4 • 312are only available for parties of 939-3111 • No credit cards • No dinner • $ more than six, seats in the colorful, folk art-filled room go early ,59,1*3$5.52$' as smaller groups try to avoid -JODPMO 1BSL disappointment (see p83). $'',621675((7
Chicago’s Top 10
feng-shui-inspired interior makes for a chic gourmet experience. The menu features seafood prepared with Asian and French influences and a light approach. d 2039 W.
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dish pizza since 1943 – about as long as Chicagoans have debated whose pie is best. Its version comes several inches deep, filled with cheese and toppings of your choice, truly a meal in one slice. The smallish Victorian brownstone strains under demand, sending the overflow down the street to its spin-off Pizzeria Due. Uno’s individual pizza served at lunchtime is a bargain. d 29 E. Ohio St.
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Unless stated, all restaurants accept credit cards, recommend reservations, and are open for lunch and dinner.
41
Chicago’s Top 10
Left Dim Sum at Phoenix Right Sushi Bar at Mirai
Ethnic Eats
! Arun’s Distinct from other Thai
restaurants in the city, Arun’s serves a gourmet version of the spice-and-vegetable driven Asian fare with high quality ingredients and careful presentation. Multicourse fixed-price menus change nightly, and dietary restrictions can be taken into consideration with advance notice. The quiet Thai art-trimmed rooms are conducive to conversation. d 4156 N.
Kedzie Ave. • Map B4 • 1-773-539-1909 • Closed Mon, lunch • $$$$$
Xe Tang-Tank @ Pho This popular destination in
Little Vietnam features several big, round tables for sociable, easy sharing of meals. A vast menu includes traditional dishes such as Bahn Xeo (Vietnamese crispy pancakes) and Pho (noodle soup garnished with heaps of fresh cilantro and basil, with oxtail as an optional extra). Bring your own alcohol. d 4953 N. Broadway • Map B3
• 1-773-878-2253 • Closed Wed • $$
£ Phoenix Superior Chinese dim sum,
served with a panoramic view of downtown Chicago, garner out-the-door lines for this Chinatown gem. Dishes emerging from the kitchen are quickly snatched by waiting diners, leading many to ask for a table near it. d 2131 S. Archer Ave. • Map A6 • 312-328-0848 • $$
Sushi $ Mirai This hip, two-story eaterie
carves some of the city’s best Japanese sushi. Options include the usual suspects such as tuna and salmon but for the most creative fare sit at the sushi bar, make a special request, and put yourself in the chef’s hands. An upstairs lounge serves up sake martinis. d 2020 W. Division St. • Map J1 • 1-773-8628500 • Closed Sun, lunch • $$$
% Ixcapuzalco This off-the-beaten path,
regional Mexican specialist is operated by a protégé of Rick Bayless of Frontera Grill fame (see p41). Foodies head here for the outstanding mole sauces from Oaxaca, which change daily, and top fish, pork, chicken, or beef. d 2919 N. Milwaukee Ave. • Map B4 • 1-773-4867340 • Closed Tue • $$$$
^ Tiffin Locals debate which Indian
Tiffin
42
restaurant along the eatery-andsari-shop-lined Devon Avenue
• Map B3 • 1-773-338-2143 • $$
Sather & Ann Locals line up on Sunday
mornings at the original Ann Sather Belmont Avenue Ann Sather for plates of oversized, sticky Fogo de Chao cinnamon rolls. But the Swedish The Sao Paulo owned Fogo diner makes a more ethnic appeal de Chao specializes in the allat lunch and dinner with limpa you-can-eat churrascaria tradition (Swedish rye bread), zesty duck of Brazilian barbecue. At your with lingonberries, and hearty table costumed “gauchos” will Swedish meatballs (see p91). carve 15 different cuts of skewerroasted meats, including filet, Marigold rumpsteak, leg of lamb, and pork This Indian restaurant has a loin. You can use a plate-side modern vibe and the menu indicator to signal for more or reflects multiple regions of India, “basta.” A lavish salad bar begins with vegetarian, seafood and every meal. d 661 N. LaSalle St. meaty options such as samosas, • Map K2 • 312-932-9330 • Closed Sat & South Indian seafood curry, Sun lunch • $$$$ coriander-crusted halibut with '(921$9( pakora-style vegetables, and 3(7(5621$9( lamb shank vindaloo. Knowledge-BLF able waiters are on-hand to help !NDERSONVILLE . J DI J H B O /$:5(1&($9(18( curry-challenged diners navigate 0217526($9( the menu. d 4832 N. Broadway.
Chicago’s Top 10
(see p52) qualifies as the best. Among them, Tiffin impresses with tender tandoori oven specialties and subtlely spiced lentils. More upscale than most of its neighboring competitors, it generates a warm welcome via the enthusiasm of its staff. d 2536 W. Devon Ave.
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43
Chicago’s Top 10
Left Funky Buddha Lounge Right Bin 36
Bars & Clubs Pomme Rouge ! LaLa Pomme boasts two salons: Paradis (paradise) features elegant couches, firerplaces, and a Victorian sideboard; Enfer (hell) has fabriccovered walls, dozens of pillows, and the design decadence of an opium den. In the curtained booths of the main room enjoy the extensive list of champagnes and wines and the posh nibbles, such as caviar. d 108 W. Kinzie St.
• Map K3 • 312-245-9555 • Adm. Fri & Sat
Sky @ Whiskey Nightlife goes sky-high at this
intimate club on the 33rd floor of the W. Chicago Lakeshore hotel (see p117). Locals and guests mingle among ‘70s retro furnishings while soul and light house music provide the beat (though there’s no dancing) to a backdrop of stunning views. d 644 N. Lake
Shore Dr. • Map M3 • 312-255-4463 • Free
Lounge £ Zebra An illegal speakeasy during Prohibition, this tiny piano bar has stood the test of time and
competition, packing in loyal revelers nightly. Zebra prints dominate the décor, and martinis are the drink of choice. Singing along with the pianist to show tunes, torch songs, and oldies is expected (see p83).
Buddha Lounge $ Funky This favorite is easily
identified by the fat, happy Buddha statue outside. Inside, a mixed crowd of urban hipsters and young professionals sip everything from beer to bubbly in the low-ceilinged lounge. As the evening unfolds, the dance floor heats up with clubbers grooving to soul, salsa, hip-hop, R&B, house, rap, and reggae. d 728 W. Grand Ave. • Map K3 • 312-666-1695
% Four A varied crowd packs the
neon-lit two-storey high dancefloor of this off-thebeaten-track club, while local DJs spin techno, rave, and hiphop. Opt for the signature drink, Four Martini – a blend of four Stoli vodka flavors and a splash of orange juice – while you check out the laser light show under the 4-ft disco ball. d 1551 W. Division St. • Map J1 • 1-773-235-9100 • Closed Sun & Mon
Passage ^ LeTucked along an alley and
Zebra Lounge
44
down a flight of stairs is the alluring Le Passage. The candlelit, wood-paneled room is divided by gold-wrapped columns.
Unless otherwise stated, bars and clubs are open daily, have a cover charge after 9/10pm, and have DA.
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Velvet chairs are free for lounging early on, but later they’re reserved for big spenders. The dance floor fills up late, with DJs playing pop remixes. d 937
d 1444 W. Chicago Ave. • Map J2 • 312226-7600 • Adm. charged some nights depending on the DJ
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N. Rush St. • Map L2 • 312-255-0022 • Closed Sun & Mon
The James hotel offers signature deconstructed cocktails, such as a Ketel One martini with a vermouth and olive lollipop, or the James – made with Stoli Raz, elderflower and lime juice, served in a martini glass coated in a hard, raspberry candy shell. Modern design, lowslung lounge seating, candlelit cocktail tables, and plasma screens with video art all go to set the swanky scene. d 610 N Rush St. • Map
36 & Bin This lofty space is a triple
pleasure, with its high-end restaurant, casual café, and sociable wine bar. The large, zinctopped oval bar is a lively setting for couples to share conversation and a cocktail, or for singles to mingle. “Wine flights” are a must-try, offering four halfglasses of different, but related, wines (see p83).
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Sofitel Hotel (see p115), a fashionable, over-30, mixed crowd fills this lobby lounge after work, lingering until the wee hours. Black-clad servers dispense martinis with scrumptious flavors such as chocolate and raspberry. d 20 E.
L2 • 312-660-7200 • Closed Sun & Mon
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Chicago’s Top 10
clad nightclub forgoes dancing, and instead focuses on the pure enjoyment of the music. In fact, every visual aspect here serves to enhance the fantastic audio system: padded walls absorb sound, while the square-cut metal ceiling tiles diffuse it throughout the room. The sonic theme is further complemented by sleek steel and cool gray décor.
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45
Chicago’s Top 10
Left Kingston Mines Right Green Mill Cocktail Lounge
Blues & Jazz Joints Mines ! Kingston The largest of Chicago’s
blues joints, Kingston Mines packs its Lincoln Park locale with students, young professionals, and a broader spectrum of tourists. Two stages provide non-stop musical entertainment from 8pm to near 4am (5am on Saturdays). Acts range from homegrown house bands to national touring headliners. The kitchen serves up beer-sopping barbecue. d 2548 N.
Halsted St. • Map E2 • 1-773-477-4647
Guy’s Legends @ Buddy A legend himself, bluesman
Buddy Guy operates perhaps the best blues club in the city. The South Loop destination draws a mix of students, tourists, and local fans, particularly when Guy himself headlines. The place gets so packed that aisles are marked on the flooring and monitored by bouncers who make sure standingroom-only patrons keep them clear (see p96). d 754 S. Wabash Ave.
Mill $ Green Cocktail Lounge
A former Prohibition era speakeasy, Uptown’s landmark Green Mill is a vintage treasure with a sweeping curved bar, vinyl booths, fading murals, and an authentic air of Chicago’s gangster past. The city’s premier jazz talents like Kurt Elling and Patricia Barber regularly play gigs here and Uptown Poetry Slam feature every sunday. It’s out of the way but every cabbie knows how to get there. d 4802 N. Broadway • Map E2 • 1-773-878-5552 • Limited DA
of Blues % House Folk art and exotic architec-
tural remnants festoon the funky House of Blues. The vast 1500seat concert hall presents a variety of national touring acts from hard rock to hip hop in addition to blues. The Sunday gospel
• Map L5 • 312-427-1190
£ B.L.U.E.S. Among Chicago’s many
blues clubs, B.L.U.E.S feels the most like a Southern juke joint. Chalk it up to the narrow confines, loud sounds, and sweaty dancers. The club is across the street from the popular Kingston Mines, but it’s a better choice for older, more musically versed blues fans. Better yet, why not stop into both! d 2519 N. Halsted St.
• Map E2 • 1-773-528-1012
46
Andy’s Jazz Club
Unless otherwise stated all venues are open daily, charge admission, and have DA.
brunch with seatings from 9:30am to noon is a must. d 329 N. Dearborn St. • Map K3 • 312-923-2000
saxophonist Fred Anderson’s Velvet Lounge offers a less worndown atmosphere than its former home on S. Indiana Ave., where a wide range of jazz greats played since 1982. However, some of the old features have been retained, such as the chandeliers. Now regulars and an increasing array of new fans populate the club. Sunday nights see regular jam sessions (see p.96).
Buddy Guy’s Legends
apart. Seats at both venues are few and far between, so come early if you need one, or be prepared to dance. The admission charge covers both clubs, which encourages bar hopping. d 536 N.
& Rosa’s Though off-the-beaten club
Clark St. & 736 N. Clark St. • Map K2 • 312661-0100 • Closed Mon & Sun respectively • www.blueschicago.com
path, the family-owned Rosa’s is beloved citywide for its support of local artists such as blues harpist Sugar Blue and the genuine welcome by its owners, Tony Mangiullo and his mother Rosa. The latter sometimes cooks for the patrons of this simple tavern. d 3420 W. Armitage Ave. • Map
Jazz Club ) Andy’s With its musical program-
ming that begins at lunchtime and continues into the evening, Andy’s fills a void for those jazz fans who can’t hold out for the late-night headliners. Prime perches are much sought after at the horseshoe-shaped bar in the no-fuss River North club. d 11 E.
E4 • 1-773-342-0452 • Closed Sun & Mon • www.rosaslounge.com
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11
offers some of the city’s best sightlines. Named for a jazz standard, Green Dolphin encompasses both a separate fine dining restaurant and an equally spacious showroom that also serves casual café fare. On the musical bill expect the sorts of ensembles that can audibly fill the space, such as big bands and Latin groups. d 2200 N.
Chicago’s Top 10
Velvet Lounge ^ The The new location for Chicago
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47
Chicago’s Top 10
Left Steppenwolf Theatre Co. Right Gene Siskel Film Center
Arts Venues Opera House ! Civic This imposing Art Deco
building is largely devoted to performances by the Lyric Opera. Each year (September through March), the company stages work by everyone from Wagner to Gilbert and Sullivan. Touring classical dance troops and musicals fill the off-season bill.
d 20 N. Wacker Dr. • Map J4 • www.civicoperahouse.com
Center @ Symphony While visiting orchestras,
lecturers, and jazz artists feature on its program, this center is first and foremost the home of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. The complex holds a main stage, recital hall, and a bar-restaurant named Rhapsody (see p75).
d 220 S. Michigan Ave. • Map L6 • www.cso.org
Theatre Co. £ Steppenwolf Founded in 1974 in a church
basement, Steppenwolf has gained acclaim based on the fame of its ensemble, which includes actor John Malkovich. Though the company has moved upscale to a specially built theater in Lincoln Park, it is still distinguished by raw emotion and edgy productions. d 1650 N. Halsted
St. • Map E2 • www.steppenwolf.org
Theatre $ Goodman One of Chicago’s leading
theater companies, the Goodman frequently spins off
48
Court Theatre
productions to Broadway in New York and has earned a Tony award, the theater community’s highest, for its efforts. Noted productions include dramas by Eugene O’Neill and August Wilson and an annual version of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol. d 170 N. Dearborn St. • Map K3 • www.goodman-theatre.org
Shakespeare % Chicago Theater
This Navy Pier venue presents a dynamic space for Shakespeare’s repertory. The 510-seat courtyard design is inspired by the original layout in traditional playhouses of the Bard’s day. Visiting nonShakespeare productions take over after the company’s September-to-April season. d 800 E. Grand Ave. • Map L3 • www.chicagoshakes.com
City ^ Second Since 1959, Chicago’s famed
d 1616 N. Wells St. • Map K2 • www.secondcity.com
Theatre & Court This theater traces its roots
Old Town School of Folk Music
membership (including Friends actor David Schwimmer) and Broadway bound, award-winning shows have furthered this company’s stardom. d 821 N.
to three Molière productions performed at the University of Chicago in 1955. The Court still mounts many classics, but it varies its seasons with musicals like Guys and Dolls and literary adaptations such as James Joyce’s The Dead. d 5535 S. Ellis
Michigan Ave. • Map L2 • www.lookingglasstheatre.org
Siskel Film Center ) Gene Tiny by cineplex standards,
Ave. • Map E5 • www.courttheatre.org
Town School of * Old Folk Music
the Gene Siskel Film Center screens films from the silent era onwards. Cineastes will rave about the cushy rocking chairs, excellent sightlines, and art gallery as well as foreign, independent and experimental films rarely shown elsewhere.
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Since the 1950s the Old Town School has brought world and homegrown folk music performers to Chicago. Its new home in Lincoln Square opened in 1998 with a concert by Joni Mitchell, though you’re more likely to d 164 N. State St. • Map K2 catch a women’s ensemble from • www.siskelfilmcenter.com Mali and contemPLOH $IJDBHP porary folkies such as (& + , & $ * 2 $9 ( PLOHV :& + , & $ * 2 $9 ( 6WUHHWHUYLOOH Patty Larkin. d 4544 N. Lincoln Ave. • Map E3 • www.oldtownschool.org
Chicago’s Top 10
Second City comedy troupe has launched such comic lights as John Belushi, Mike Myers, and Bill Murray. Actors improvize their lines in a series of skits connected by a current events theme on the cabaret-style main stage. Reservations are a must.
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For information on entertainment in Chicago See p109.
49
Chicago’s Top 10
Left Taste of Chicago Center Venetian Night Right Chicago Gospel Music Festival
Festivals & Events Blues Festival ! Chicago The raucous weekend-long
Blues Festival kicks off summer in Chicago. An estimated 750,000 listeners converge on Grant Park for the world’s largest free blues event. The main stage line-up spans traditional bluesmen like Honey Boy Edwards, jazz interpreters such as Mose Allison, and blues-inflected popsters like Bonnie Raitt. Smaller side stages offer a more intimate audience experience. d Map L6 • 312-744-3315
• Late May–early Jun
Summer @ Chicago Neighborhood Festivals
Chicago is a city of neighborhoods with upwards of 100 neighborhood festivals to prove it. Virtually every summer weekend features an event or three ranging from the gay-oriented North Halsted Market Days to the ethnic Korean Street Festival. d 312-744-3315 • May–Sep
Gospel £ Chicago Music Festival
For three days Grant Park resounds with stirring choirs and impassioned soloists. Headliners have included R&B-star-turnedMemphis-preacher, Al Green. d Map L6 • 312-744-3315 • Early Jun
Town Art Fair $ Old This 50-year-old fair installs
250 artist booths along Old Town’s historic and leafy lanes. The artwork is supplemented by food vendors, kids’ entertainment, and garden tours. d 1763 N. Park Ave. • Off Map • 312-337-1938 • www.oldtown triangle.com • Jun • Adm.
Festival % Ravinia The summer home of the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Ravinia stages concerts (classical, jazz, and pop) in suburban Highland Park. Sheltered seats are available but it’s more fun to pack a picnic and join the crowds on the lawn. d Off Map • 1-847-2665100 • www.ravinia.org • Jun–Sep • Adm.
of Chicago ^ Taste Chicago’s signature foods
including deep dish pizza star during the nearly two-week long Taste. Musical entertainers, a carnival with rides, and cooking demonstrations entertain at the sprawling Grant Park event. d Map L6 • 312-744-3315 • Late Jun–early Jul
Neighborhood festival in Chinatown
50
Night & Venetian On this night, boat owners
dress up their ships and form a
Unless otherwise indicated all festivals and events are free and have DA.
Top 10 Sports Teams & Events Cubs ! Chicago Despite the Cubbies’ losing
White Sox @ Chicago The White Sox are renowned for their top-quality baseball. d 312-674-1000 • www. whitesox.com • Apr–Sep
Bears £ Chicago A football team generating Chicago Air & Water Show
festive marine parade that culminates with fireworks over the lake. For the best views try Monroe Harbor at the lakefront. d 312-7443315 • Late Jul/early Aug
Air & Water Show * Chicago This massive display of mili-
tary power features historic aircraft flybys, a staged amphibious attack, and precision flying teams. Prime beachfront viewing spots are from Oak Street to Montrose Beach. d 312-744-3315 • Mid-Aug
( Just as the Blues Fest ushers Chicago Jazz Festival
in summer, the smaller Jazz Fest caps it. Music fans are drawn to Grant Park for free concerts by a range of jazz greats like Branford Marsalis and Roy Hargrove.
d Map L6 • 312-744-3315 • Late Aug/early Sep (inc. Labor Day weekend)
)
Magnificent Mile Holiday Lights Festival
Merchants mark the start of the holiday season by lighting the shops, lampposts, and trees along Michigan Avenue. The parade and fireworks above the Chicago River on the Saturday night before Thanksgiving warrant braving the inevitable chill. d Map L2 • Mid Nov–end Dec
rabid fans and tailgate picnics on Soldier Field (see p12). d Ticketmaster 312-559-1212 • www. chicagobears.com • Sep–Dec
Chicago’s Top 10
streak, their baseball games are often sell-outs (see p85).
Bulls $ Chicago Their basketball just hasn’t been the same since superstar Michael Jordan left. d 312-4554000 • www.bulls.com • Oct–Apr
Blackhawks % Chicago NHL ice hockey team sharing the United Center (see p13) with the Bulls. d 312-455-7000 • www. chicagoblackhawks.com • Oct–Apr
Park ^ Arlington Thoroughbreds race just north of Chicago. d 1-847-3857500 • www.arlingtonpark.com • May–Sep
Fire & Chicago Many local Latino soccer fans support the Fire. d 1-888657-3473 • www.chicago-fire.com • Apr–Oct
Wolves * Chicago AHL’s Wolves have a better playoff record than NHL’s Blackhawks. d 1-800-843-9658 • www. chicagowolves.com • Oct–May
Marathon ( Chicago 40,000 entrants run through the city. d 312-904-9800 • www. chicagomarathon.com • Oct
Triathlon ) Chicago Over 6,000 run, bike, and swim in this one-dayer. d www. chicagotriathlon.com • Aug
For information on Chicago Events See p109
51
Chicago’s Top 10
Left Mi Barrio Taqueria, Pilsen Right Mural, Lincoln Square
Ethnic Neighborhoods
! Pilsen Named after a city in the
former Czech Republic, whose immigrants settled here in the mid-1800s, this neighborhood now claims the Midwest’s largest Mexican community. It’s anchored by the Mexican Fine Arts Center Museum (see p38) and animated by street vendors, mariachi music, and Mexican restaurants. Vibrant outdoor murals and mosaics portray Mexican culture and history. d Map B5
@ Avondale In the early 20th century,
Russian, Greek, Syrian, and Jewish enclaves. From colorful saris to Indian videos to savory curried meats, it’s almost like being in Delhi. d Map B3
$ Andersonville Amid a mix of Middle-
Eastern and Asian cultures, the late-19th-century Swedish heritage here still makes its presence felt with billowing yellow and blue flags, Swedish bakeries and shops, and the Swedish-American Museum (see p38). Adding to the minority mix is an increasing gay population – more laid-back than Boys Town (see p85) – evident in a number of trendy, gay-owned restaurants. d Map B3
menial jobs at Avondale’s local factories and brickyards attracted many hard-working Polish immigrants. Today, the area also has many Hispanics, but it’s still known as Little Little Italy, Warsaw because Taylor Street The rich smells of garlic, Chicago holds the basil, and baking bread largest concentration of waft from restaurants Poles outside the that line one of Polish capital. Chicago’s oldest Milwaukee Avenue Building detail in Chinatown southern Italian and the neighboring neighborhoods. streets also abound Though the streets have fewer with bakeries, bookstores, delis, Italians than when immigrants and a Polish Museum. d Map B4 arrived in the late 19th century, you’ll still see Italians chatting on Devon Avenue street corners and toting groceries Chicagoans who crave from Italian markets. d Map G6 cheap, authentic Indian food head north to Devon Avenue in Rogers Park. Nineteenth-century Heart of Italy Northern Italians settled English settlers named it after here in the 1920s, and some Devonshire, but since the 1960s, Chicagoans argue that this west it’s been a thriving Indian side neighborhood is actually community, mingled with
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For Ethnic Eats See pp42–3
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neighborhood is nicknamed the United Nations for its ethnic diversity. Along Argyle Street, it’s called Little Saigon for its predominantly Vietnamese flavor. Inexpensive restaurants serve thinly sliced beef, tangy soups, and shrimp crêpes. Though the area is absolutely fascinating to explore, it’s really not advisable to walk through Uptown late at night. d Map B3
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Wentworth Avenue signals your entrance to this distinctly Chinese neighborhood. Asians and nonAsians alike flock to aroma-filled dim-sum restaurants that serve a mouthwatering selection of dumplings, duck, egg rolls, and other delicacies. Shops sell everything from lanterns to delicate tea sets and mysterious Chinese herbs (see p94).
South Side neighborhood is one of the city’s oldest, being settled in the 1830s by Irish laborers who came to help build the IllinoisMichigan Canal. Bridgeport still has a mostly Irish population, and has bred five Chicago mayors, including Richard J. Daley (see p35) and his son, Richard M. Daley. The area centerpiece is US Cellular Field (formerly Comiskey Park), home ground of the Chicago White Sox (see p51). d Map B5
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Chicago’s Top 10
Little Italy
and grainy rye breads are order of the day in this bustling German enclave, where a 96-ft (29-m) outdoor mural depicts a rural German village. The hub of activity is a relatively small strip of Lincoln Avenue, between Lawrence and Western Avenues. The area maintains Old World charm with its German shops, delicatessens, bakeries, and an old-fashioned apothecary. d Map B3
LN
53
Chicago’s Top 10
Left Museum of Science & Industry Right Visitors viewing animals, Lincoln Park Zoo
Kids’ Chicago Children’s ! Chicago Museum
The engrossing, imaginative exhibits here emphasize doing – be it digging up a dinosaur bone or designing a water channel. A central, three-story rope tunnel immediately snares the attention of older visitors, though there are age-appropriate attractions for infants to pre-teens. If this place can’t exhaust the younger set’s energies, nowhere can. d 700 E. Grand Ave. • Map L3 • Open 10am–5pm Tue–Sun (to 8pm Thu & Sat) • www.chichildrensmuseum.org • Adm.
Park Zoo @ Lincoln Free admission encourages
here are family friendly, and even the sculptures that line the Pier in summer are designed to withstand climbers (see pp20–21).
Trains $ Elevated Chicago’s elevated trains
(the El) provide an inexpensive roofline tour of the city. The Brown Line in particular warrants riding en famille from Chicago Station south over the Chicago River and around the Loop, threading between the massive buildings of the financial district. Sit in the first row of the front car for an exciting view of the city ahead of you (see p108).
%
repeat visits to the Lincoln Park Shedd Aquarium Zoo (see pp24–5). Many exhibits, Upon arrival, head straight including the working Farm in for the Oceanarium to watch the the Zoo and the Children’s Zoo, thrilling dolphin and beluga allow kids to pet the whale show. Staff animals. In summer trainers frequently a motorized “train” choose children in makes a scenic the audience to help loop around the them reward the park, while on the marine mammals pond, swan-shaped Shedd Aquarium with a snack after each paddleboats float among trick. At the daily Tide Pool the ducks. Touch and reptilian Animal Encounters kids can indulge their Navy Pier urge to lay hands on the critters (see pp22–3). Kids make a beeline for Navy Pier’s old-fashioned carnival Westfield North rides including a 10-story Ferris Bridge Mall Wheel and musical carousel . The ships that line the docks, Level 3 of this tony Michigan from sleek, tall-masted Avenue mall is primarily devoted schooners to powerful motor to children’s retailers including boats will also grab their clothiers Oilily Children, Benetton attention. All the restaurants Kids, The Children’s Place, and
£
^
56
Unless otherwise stated, all attractions have Disabled Access.
• Map L2 • Open 10am–8pm Mon–Sat, 11am–7pm Sun Navy Pier
to the rooftop terrace with its great views: the outfield stands can get rowdy, but a neighboring family section bans the beer that fuels the “bleacher bums.”
In Chicago there’s a theater company for every demographic and Emerald City is its troupe devoted to young audiences. Expect lively productions such as Where the Wild Things Are as well as holiday season shows in weekend-only midday matinees at Lincoln Park’s Apollo Theater.
Café at American ) The Girl Place
Vendor of dolls with educational aims, American Girl Place feeds its fantasy world, literally, in a café where dolls are welcome in clip-to-the-table chairs. Lunch leans to simple crowd-pleasers like tomato soup, while dinner supplies standards like chicken potpie. In between, the imaginative tea proffers chocolate pudding in a flowerpot or heartshaped sandwiches. Reservations recommended (see p82).
Of Science * Museum & Industry
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Wrigley is a small and intimate stadium that’s far less intimidating for children than many larger stadia (see p85). A ticket to anywhere in the grandstand allows you to walk around and get
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Though this museum dazzles kids and adults alike with its submarine ship and replica coal mine, it’s The Idea Factory that’s designed just for Junior. With the pulling of gears and shifting of knobs, kids experiment through play with balance, construction, magnetism, and more. A currentfed waterway encourages boat building. Arrive early on weekends or expect to have to wait for access (see pp16–19).
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Chicago’s Top 10
Hello Kitty! specialist, Sanrio. Across the hall from the Lego store, the Lego Construction Zone sets out Lego bricks for play. The fourth floor food court sells kid-favored foods like hot dogs and pizza. d 520 N. Michigan Ave.
57
Chicago’s Top 10
Left Endo Exo, Armitage Avenue Center State Street Store Right Bloomingdale’s Home Store
Shopping Destinations Street ! State A slew of chain stores line this
legendary street (see p70), but it’s the two old-time department stores that make it unique. The former Marshall Field’s, now Macy’s (see p74), here since 1907, has merchandise to satisfy every wealthy woman’s needs. At Filene’s Basement the prices are lower, but the variety is still extensive (see p74).
Mile @ Magnificent Some 450 stores make this
stretch of North Michigan Avenue one of the world’s retail meccas. Besides sophisticated designer boutiques, there are malls (each with high-end department stores); and big-name chain and flagship stores (see pp26–7).
£ If you have to ask how much Oak Street
it costs, you should probably plan on just window-shopping along
this stretch of Chicago’s uppercrust Gold Coast. Boutiques here sell designer wear, accessories, and shoes fit for a Paris runway – and include some shops exclusive to Chicago such as Tessuti (menswear) and Designs by Ming (custom clothing design). d Borders: N. Michigan Ave. & Rush St. • Map L1
Row $ Jeweler’s This small strip in the Loop
boasts a large number of jewelers that sell everything from discount diamonds to top-of-the-range gems. The Jeweler’s Center at the beautiful 1912 Mallers Building (see p74) packs about 50 wholesale and retail jewelers and appraisers into 13 floors.
Neighborhood % Bucktown Once a hot-spot for starving
artists, Bucktown and adjacent Wicker Park are now gentrified locales brimming with vintage clothes stores, edgy music shops, high-style designer boutiques, and antiques importers. d Borders: Fullerton Ave. to North Ave. & Kennedy Expressway to Western Ave. • Map B4
Antique Market ^ Broadway An old-time movie palace mar-
quee indicates the 1939 building that houses this market. With 85 dealers stocking artwork, jewelry, clothing, and more in styles such as Arts and Crafts, Art Deco, and Victorian, you’re sure to find something that pleases. d 6130 N. Prairie Avenue Bookshop
58
Broadway • Map E2 • Open 11am–7pm, Mon–Sat, 11am–6pm Sun • DA
Avenue Bookshop & Prairie It’s fitting that a city known
Top 10 Souvenirs Mints ! Frango Marshall Field’s/Macy’s (see
*
on Parade £ Cows Mini versions of the highly
Chicago Architecture Foundation Shop
Located in the historic Santa Fe Center (see p72), this shop is part of the CAF’s ArchiCenter, which also puts on exhibitions and runs city tours. Browse the shop for architecture and designrelated books; art-glass panels and lamps in Frank Lloyd Wright designs; desk gadgets; and desirable kitchen gizmos. d 224 S. Michigan Ave. • Map L6 • Open 9:30am–6pm daily • DA
Home ( Bloomingdale’s & Furniture Store
This store’s lovingly restored 1913 Moorish-style building is an attraction in its own right. Inside there’s a sleek, four-level atrium with home decor departments that sell everything from highthread-count bedding to chic cookware and top-quality furniture. d 600 N. Wabash Ave. • Map K3 • Opening times vary • DA
Avenue ) Armitage This tree-lined street in
Lincoln Park (see p85) is a favorite for those who are seeking out-of-the-ordinary clothing, home decor, bath and body products – and don’t mind spending more to get it. Have patience finding a parking spot on weekends; once you’re in, just shop-hop from one adorable boutique to the next.
p74) doesn’t make these meltaway mint chocolates anymore, but still sells them by the box-full.
& Jazz CDs @ Blues CDs by Chicago music legends are on sale at the Water Tower Visitor Information Center (see p109).
decorated cows from 1999s “Cows on Parade” display are sold at the ArchiCenter store.
Chicago’s Top 10
for its architecture has one of the best architectural bookstores in the world. Besides carrying a range of 17,000 new and 7,000 out-of-print titles, the store is also appointed with furniture designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, Mies van der Rohe, and Le Corbusier (see p74).
poster $ Art See the real thing, then buy a copy at the extensive Art Institute gift shop (see p8).
Jordan Jersey % Michael No longer a Bull, but he’s still a star. Buy Jordan’s merchandise at United Center’s (see p13) Fandemonium store.
baseball cap ^ Cubs Head to the Tribune Tower (see p27) gift shop for caps of the Major League team owned by the Chicago Tribune.
glass & Art Get a little Prairie style with a replica Frank Lloyd Wright art-glass panel from the Chicago Architecture Foundation store.
mugs * Chicago The Chicago Historical Society (see p86) sells mugs depicting the faces of famous local residents like Al Capone.
skeleton ( Sue Sue, the world’s largest T. rex skeleton is far less menacing in mini model form from the Field Museum (see p14).
snowglobe ) Chicago Recall Chicago winters with a city skyline snowglobe from Accent Chicago in the Water Tower Place mall(see p26).
For more on shopping in Chicago See pp74, 82, 88, 102, 113.
59
Chicago’s Top 10
Left Scene from The Relic, set at the Field Museum Right Andy Garcia in Hero, Drake Hotel
Film Locations Center & Plaza ! Daley Daley Plaza (see p73) with its
famed Picasso sculpture was the setting for a sensational chase scene in cult movie classic The Blues Brothers (1980). Stars John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd, playing ex-criminal brothers, dramatically crash their car through the center’s plate-glass windows, specially installed for the filming, as the authorities hopelessly attempt to stop them.
R. Thompson Center @ James In Running Scared (1986)
Billy Crystal and Gregory Hines are Chicago police pals planning early retirement, but first they must thwart a drug kingpin and stay alive. The final chase scene takes place in the Thompson Center (see p37) where the two swap wisecracks while swinging on ropes through the airy atrium, shooting out glass elevators, and ultimately triumphing.
Art Institute of Chicago £ The The consummate high school comedy Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986) stars Matthew Broderick,
Exterior of State of Illinois Center as featured in Running Scared
who skips school and takes his girlfriend (Mia Sara) and best friend (Paul Ruck) on an actionpacked Chicago day. At the Art Institute, Broderick and Sara kiss in front of a window designed by Chagall, while Ruck stares intensely at A Sunday on La Grande Jatte –1884 (see p8).
Station $ Union Elliott Ness (Kevin Costner)
brings down Chicago gangster Al Capone (Robert DeNiro) in the true story The Untouchables (1987). In one unforgettable scene, a shoot-out on a Union Station staircase causes a mother to lose her grip on her baby carriage, which bounces in slow motion down the stairs, saved at the last moment by Ness’s partner. d 210 S. Canal St. • Map J5
Hotel % Drake In feel-good film Hero
While You Were Sleeping at the Randolph El Station
60
(1992) John Bubber (Andy Garcia) dupes the public into thinking he’s a hero. Feeling
A scene from Chain Reaction on Michigan Avenue Bridge
^ Wrongly accused and conThe Hilton Chicago
victed of murder, Dr. Richard Kimble (Harrison Ford) dodges the authorities led by Tommy Lee Jones to prove his innocence in The Fugitive (1993). He winds up in a pulse-pounding chase through this grand hotel (see p116) onto its roof, down its elevator shaft, and into the hotel’s laundry room.
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starred Penelope Ann Miller and Tom Sizemore as researchers trying to stop a murderous monster before it killed again. Many interior scenes were shot on replica sets but were nearperfect matches to the real museum (see pp14–15).
Tom Hanks is Michael Sullivan, an Irish gangster living in 1930s Chicago. After his wife and young son are murdered, he flees town with his older son. In seeking a safe refuge, they enter a hotel, the exterior of which is the beautiful Wrigley Building (see p27). However, the interior scenes were actually filmed at The Hilton Chicago. 1257+ / $6$//( 675( (7
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symbol of hard-working Chicago, and they feature significantly in the romantic comedy While You Were Sleeping (1995). Sandra Bullock plays an El station clerk who falls in love with a handsome commuter. He tumbles off the platform, Bullock saves his life, and comedy and romance ensue. d Map L4
Chicago (see pp28–9) who is framed for murder. In a nailbiting chase scene, he trys to escape by running up the Michigan Avenue Bridge (see p27) as it’s raised.
Chicago’s Top 10
guilty, he resolves to jump off a window ledge at The Drake (see p115). Reality interrupted the filming when guests arrived for a party at the hotel. Director Stephen Frears protested so violently, he almost got arrested.
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Chicago’s Top 10
Left Blues Festival, Grant Park Right Gold Coast seen from Oak Street Beach
Parks & Beaches & Grant parks ! Millennium As well as a center for world-class art, music, architecture and landscape design, the 24-acre (10-ha) Millennium Park offers winter ice skating, interactive public art, al fresco dining and free classical music concerts. Together with the adjoining 19th century Grant Park, which hosts many of the city’s varied and vibrant festivals (see pp50–51), it constitutes one of the finest, userfriendly green spaces in Chicago (see p71).
attracts a broad range of urbandwellers. Its lively ocean-linershaped bathhouse (which includes umbrella rentals, shower rooms, snack vendors, and a rooftop restaurant) makes it particularly family friendly. Rows of beach volleyball courts draw teams often made up of impromptu players, and a seasonal outdoor gym welcomes day use(see p86).
Street Beach $ Oak At the foot of the
tony Gold Coast shopping lane, Oak Street Beach reflects its environs. Though just next to North Avenue Lincoln Park Beach, you won’t see many children here. With its The greenway Lincoln emphasis on flesh and flash, Park stretches from North Oak Street is usually filled Avenue up to Hollywood with toned bodies and tiny Avenue, a recreational apron bikinis. Still, the crescentbetween lakefront and shaped strand is the closest housing. In Chicago’s infancy, beach to the Magnificent the southern portion of the The Republic, Mile (see pp26–7) and park was a cemetery for Jackson Park makes a great place to stop Civil War dead, later exand dip your toes after humed and interred elsesome serious shopping. d Map L1 where to make way for the park. Now it’s the North Side’s counterpart to Grant Park. Popular Jackson Park attractions such as Lincoln Park Laid out by the famed landZoo (see pp24–5), the Lincoln scape designer Frederick Law Park Conservatory (see p86), and Olmsted for the 1893 World’s Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum Columbian Exposition, Jackson (see p85) supplement the Park, along with its Museum of beaches, harbors, playing fields, Science & Industry (see and bike paths. d Map F3 pp16–19), is among the few developments still remaining North Avenue Beach from that World’s Fair. The Chicago’s most populist Southside park includes a beach, North Avenue Beach Japanese garden with waterfalls,
@
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All city beaches have lifeguards on patrol 9am–9:30pm, Memorial Day–Labor Day.
Beach * Foster Near the northern end of the
Park ( Olive A pocket-sized park just
Avenue, Montrose is spacious where downtown beaches are jammed. Convenient for swimmers, this North Side spot includes a changing house and shower facilities. The vast playing fields wedged between the sand and Lake Shore Drive are the domain of Hispanic soccer clubs: on weekends their numbers draw Latin food and balloon vendors. Look for kayak rentals that launch here in summer. d Map C3
Newberry Library, Washington Square is a prime plot of Gold Coast for resting tired feet and gazing at the handsome 1892 building. The park’s ample benches tend to draw bookish sorts and picnicking office workers at lunchtime. d Map K2
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city planner Daniel Burnham, Burnham Park is the city’s green lawn rolling south from Museum Campus (see p92) to Hyde Park. Like Lincoln and Grant parks, it is charted by the lakefront bike path, but unlike its northern counterparts Burnham Park’s section isn’t overrun, making this south-leg journey far more enjoyable. Along the way you’ll find basketball courts and beaches. The return trip north provides city skyline panoramas. d Map C6
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colorful lanterns, and a bird sanctuary on an island in a peaceful lagoon. d Map F6
beside Navy Pier(see pp20–21), Olive Park makes great strolling grounds. Jutting into Lake Michigan just off Ohio Street, it provides skyline views similar to Navy Pier’s though without the tourist mobs. Quiet and out of the way, this is one of the city’s most romantic parks. d Map M2
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Chicago’s Top 10
lakefront bike path, Foster Beach proves a timely spot to cool off. There’s a snack bar, and the nearby picnic tables and grills draw family crowds. A beachside basketball court hosts lively freefor-all games to which only the talented should apply. d Map B3
&ARŽ3OUTH
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63
Chicago’s Top 10
Left Chicago Botanic Garden Center Church window, Historic Pullman District Right IIT
Sights off the Beaten Track Park Conservatory Historic Pullman District ! Garfield £ Beneath glass-domed roofs, This industrial town was con-
flora from around the world thrives in spacious greenhouses. Information panels give the lowdown as you stroll through the conservatory’s six indoor areas that include a Children’s Garden and the Sweet House (containing plants such as cacao, sugar cane, etc). d 300 N. Central Park Ave. • Map B5 • 312-746-5100 • El station: ConservatoryCentral Park Dr. (green line) • Open 9am– 5pm daily, Thu 9am–8pm • Free • DA
@ About 25 miles (40 km) north Chicago Botanic Garden
of Chicago, this attraction comprises 385 acres (155 ha) of natural habitats and beautifully landscaped gardens. Some of the most popular are the romantic Rose Garden, the tranquil islandbased Japanese Garden, and the charming English Walled Garden.
d 1000 Lake Cook Rd. Glencoe • 1-847-8355440 • Map A1 • Metra station: Glencoe • Open 8am–sunset daily • Adm. • DA
ceived in the 1880s by railroad magnate George Pullman for his workers. The planned utopia had apartments, shops, a hospital, and a hotel, but failed after a strike in 1894, when a decrease in wages made rents unaffordable.
d Map C6 • Metra Station: Pullman/111th St. • Visitor Center: 11141 S. Cottage Grove Ave., open 11am–3pm Tue–Sun • 1-773-785-8901 • DA
Institute $ lllinois of Technology (IIT)
In 1940, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe planned the campus of this new university. He also designed around 20 of the buildings, which demonstrate his design philosophies. Stop by the on-campus visitor center for information and docent-guided or self-guided tours. d 3201 S. State St. (Visitor Center) • Map C5 • 312-567-3000 • El station: 35thBronzeville-IIT (green line) • Tours $5 • DA
Road % Sheridan This lakefront road’s low speed
limit is perfect for gawping at the palatial, architecturally diverse homes that line it as you drive north to Evanston and beyond. Art buffs might like to stop at the Evanston Art Center at Harley Clarke House – one of the oldest and largest community visual art centers in Illinois. d From Rogers
Grosse Point Lighthouse, Evanston
64
Park to Lake Bluff • Map B2 • Evanston Art Center, 2603 N. Sheridan Rd., 847475-5300, open 10am–10pm Mon–Thu, 10am–1pm Fri & Sat, 1–4pm Sun, Free
^ Bronzeville A bronze memorial at Martin
Baha’i Temple
• El station: 35th-Bronzeville-IIT (green line)
& This exquisite white structure Baha’i Temple
is one of eight temples of the Baha’i faith worldwide. Its nine doors symbolize how people can come to God from any direction. At night, spotlights enhance its ethereal beauty. d 100 Linden Ave,
Wilmette • Map A1 • El station: Linden Ave • Visitors’ Center open 10am–8pm daily (Oct–May to 5pm); Temple open 7am–10pm daily • 1-847-853-2300 • Free • DA
Long Grove * Historic Thanks to strict regulations,
Map A5 • Metra station: Hollywood • Open 10am–5pm daily • 1-708-485-2200 • Adm. (2 and under, free) • DA
) Evanston Just north of Chicago, this
dynamic suburb brims with acclaimed restaurants, galleries, and independent shops. Northwestern University’s Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art and Sculpture Garden is well worth a visit, as is the historic Grosse Point Lighthouse and Maritime Museum. d Map B2 • Visitors Bureau
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the 19th-century heritage of this quaint town 30 miles (48 km) northwest of Chicago has been preserved. The candy-filled Long Grove Confectionery store is a local institution. Annual events include the popular Chocolate Festival. d Off Map • At Route 83
what kind of bird you’d be on a machine that measures your flapping ability. d 3300 Golf Rd, Brookfield •
Chicago’s Top 10
Luther King, Jr. Drive and 35th Street honors the journey many African-Americans made to this neighborhood as they fled the oppression of the South in the early 20th century. Nearby, sidewalk plaques celebrate local luminaries. Chicago’s answer to Harlem offers jazz and blues in its clubs, graceful mansions aplenty, and lots of fine soul food. d Map C5
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together in themed, naturalistic environments at this popular zoo. Zones include Tropic World, where thunderstorms occur regularly (you stay dry) and Habitat Africa, whose new Forest exhibit has shy okapi and a re-created African village. In Be A Bird House, see
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AROUND TOWN
Near North 78–83 Northside 84–91 South Loop 92–97 Far South 98–103
CHICAGO’S TOP 10
The Loop 68–75
Around Town – The Loop
Left Harold Washington Library Center Right Elevated train, The Loop
The Loop
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AMED AFTER THE RING OF ELEVATED TRAIN TRACKS that encircle it, this
is downtown Chicago’s core, and the city’s financial and governmental hub. Abuzz with laptop-toting business folk during the week, the Loop is transformed on weekends when a veritable shopping frenzy erupts along its famous State Street. Those thirsty for culture also come flocking to view the area’s many architecturally significant buildings and notable public art. A recent infusion of corporate dollars has given the Loop a real boost: the resulting restoration of old theaters and the promotion of the theater district has lured in more visitors, and the many great bars and restaurants that have sprung up mean that the area now offers a burgeoning nightlife.
Sights 1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 0
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Chicago Board of Trade State Street State of Illinois Center The Rookery Millennium & Grant parks
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Art Institute of Chicago ! The This extraordinary collection
Tower @ Sears An architectural superlative,
the tower offers breathtaking bird’s-eye views from its 103rd floor Skydeck, where you’ll find yourself standing on top of 76,000 tons of steel (see pp12–13).
Cultural Center £ Chicago Built in 1897 as the city’s
first main library, this magnificent Beaux Arts building was described at the time as the “people’s palace.” In 1991, the library moved out, allowing several galleries, performance spaces and a visitor information center to move in. Guided tours offer a historical overview of the building, which occupies an entire block and features one of the world’s largest domes, designed by L. C. Tiffany, and rooms modeled after the Doge’s Palace in Venice and the Acropolis in Athens. d 78 E. Washington St.
• Map L4 • 312-744-6630 • Open 8am–7pm Mon–Thu, 8am–6pm Fri, 9am–6pm Sat, 10am–6pm Sun • Tours 1:15pm Wed, Fri & Sat • Free • DA
El $ The Originally called the
Union Loop, this system of elevated trains came about after the 1871 Great Chicago Fire (see p34) when the city was rebuilt with such unexpected success that, within 20 years, its streets could no longer handle the influx of people, streetcars, and horses filling them. Today, three lines ring the business district – the
Tiffany Dome, Chicago Cultural Center
Orange, Purple, Pink, and Brown lines – with three others connecting it to destinations farther afield (see p56).
Around Town – The Loop
of exhibits spans over 4,000 years of international art, much of it donated by wealthy Chicago collectors (see pp8–11).
Harold Washington % Library Center
Named after former city Mayor Harold Washington, Chicago’s first Afro-American mayor (see p35), this is the largest public library building in the country. Its collections, which include a superlative Blues Archive and a vast children’s library, fill an incredible 70 miles (110 km) of shelving. Architects Hammond, Beeby, and Babka incorporated architectural elements of several Chicago landmarks, such as The Rookery (see p70) and The Art Institute (see pp8–9) in the building’s design: don’t miss the ninth-floor Winter Garden atrium, which soars two stories to a spectacular glass dome. d 400 S. State
Sears Tower
St. • Map K5 • Open 9am–7pm Mon–Thu, 9am–5pm Fri & Sat, 1–5pm Sun • Free • DA
Borrow piano sheet music at the Harold Washington Library and tickle the ivories in one of the six free-to-use practice rooms.
69
Around Town – The Loop
Board of Trade ^ Chicago The Chicago Board of Trade
(CBOT) was founded in 1848 to create a central marketplace in the fast-developing city, and moved to its current 45-story home in 1930. Designed by Holabird and Root, this landmark building is a stunning example of Art Deco. Capping the majestic limestone building is a huge statue of Ceres, the Roman goddess of grain and harvest. A glittering 23story glass-and-steel addition designed by Helmut Jahn was completed in 1980. d 141 W. Jackson Blvd. • Map K4 • Closed to the public until further notice
The Loop’s Sculpture Setting a trend for public artwork Downtown, Pablo Picasso’s untitled sculpture, simply known as “the Picasso,” was donated to Chicago in 1967. The Loop’s street corners now accommodate more than 100 sculptures, mosaics, and murals by both established and upcoming artists. A guide to the open-air artworks – the Loop Sculpture Guide – is available from the Chicago Cultural Center (see p68).
their windows with elaborate and imaginative decorations. d From Wacker Dr. to Congress Parkway • Map K4
Street & State This “great street” got its nickR. Thompson Center * James Also known as the State of name from the 1922 hit song Chicago. Although it didn’t always live up to this catchy moniker, it has won back many fans since its multi-million-dollar face-lift in 1996. It now sports replica Art Deco lampposts and subway entrances, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1998. This dynamic stretch has it all: shopping, history, education, architecture, theater, and dining. The atmosphere is especially merry during the run up to Christmas, when the Thanksgiving parade brings Santa to town, and department stores like Macy’s (see p74) fill
Illinois Center, this striking 17story, steel and granite structure shimmers with 24,600 curved glass panels. Helmut Jahn designed the controversial 1985 building to be a democratic fusion of government offices and public spaces, such as shops, restaurants, and art galleries. The soaring skylit atrium is sliced by internal glass elevator shafts and contains unusual, see-through escalators. Outside, the plaza features the intriguing 1984 sculpture Monument with Standing Beast by Jean Dubuffet. d 100 W. Randolph St. •
Map K4 • Atrium, shops, & food court open to public: 8:30am–6pm Mon–Fri • Free • DA
Rookery ( The This 11-story building,
Buckingham Fountain, Grant Park
70
with its rusticated red granite base, was the country’s largest office building and a precursor to modern skyscrapers when it was completed in 1888 by Burnham and Root (see p37). Its stunning skylit lobby was
A Day in The Loop Morning
redesigned in 1907 by Frank Lloyd Wright (see pp30–31), who added a grand staircase and hanging light fixtures, both of which carry his signature circle-in-square motif. The building’s unusual name refers to the rooks that once roosted at the site. d 209 S. LaSalle St. • Map K4 • Open 9am–5pm Mon–Fri • Free • no DA
& Grant parks ) Millennium The modern Millennium Park
(see p62) is Chicago’s superb new adaptation of its “front yard”. The park is home to a dynamic Frank Gehry-designed music pavilion and pedestrian bridge, and a vast sculpture by British artist Anish Kapoor. It also boasts lush gardens, restaurants, a winter ice rink, peristyle, and an interactive fountain by Spanish artist Jaume Plensa. The adjoining Grant Park (see p62) hosts many summer festivals including the Taste of Chicago (see p50). It is also home to Museum Campus (see p92), the Art Institute of Chicago (see pp8–11), and the ornate 1927 Buckingham Fountain.
Around Town – The Loop
State of Illinois Center
Start early with breakfast at the charming Atwood Café in the lobby of the historic Hotel Burnham (see p116), with its beautifully reconstructed interior. Then stroll a block west to Daley Plaza to see the giant unnamed Picasso sculpture, stopping off at the Hot Tix booth at 78 W Randolph Street, to get half-price, same-day tickets to a Loop theater performance. Continue along Michigan Avenue, past the Chicago Cultural Center (see p68), and south to The Art Institute of Chicago. A whirlwind tour of the highlights (see pp10–11), all conveniently located on the upper level, can be done in a couple of hours, though you may want to come back for a second helping.
Afternoon Either have lunch in The Art Institute’s outdoor café or head west along State Street to eat at Macy’s (see p74) legendary seventh-floor Walnut Room, a Chicago fixture since 1907. Then burn off the calories by shopping your way around the vast store and along the famous street that it’s situated on. For pretheater dining, try the sophisticated Rhapsody (see p75), convenient for the Symphony Center (see p48) Or, on weekdays, try the all-you-caneat buffet at Trattoria No. 10 (see p75).
Evening After the show, hop a quick cab ride to stylish Nine (see p75) for a cocktail or some dancing late into the night in the slick secondfloor Ghost Bar.
d Map L6 & L4 • Open daily • Free • DA
71
Around Town – The Loop
Left Chicago Theater Center Fisher Building Right One North LaSalle
Architectural Sites Building ! Monadnock At 16 stories, this Holabird
and Roche designed building (1891) is one of the world’s tallest all-masonry high-rises. Inside, there’s a magnificent wrought-iron staircase (see p36). d 53 W. Jackson Blvd. • Map K4
Building @ Marquette Holabird and Roche also built
this 1895 Chicago School structure with a steel skeleton and decorative ornamentation. d 140 S. Dearborn St. • Map K4
Building £ Reliance Daniel H. Burnham’s stun-
ning glass-and-white-glazed-terracotta building (1895) is now the Hotel Burnham (see p116).
Building $ Fisher Another Chicago School
edifice with a steel structure, this 1896 neo-Gothic building is also by Daniel H. Burnham. Aquatic motifs on the façade honor the building’s first owner, L. G. Fisher. d 343 S. Dearborn St. • Map K5
Pirie % Carson Scott Building
North LaSalle * One This 1930-built, 49-story
building was Chicago’s tallest for 35 years, and is one of the city’s best surviving examples of Art Deco architecture. d Map K4
Steel Building ( Inland One of the first skyscrapers
to be built (in 1957) on steel, not concrete, pilings. It predated the John Hancock building (see p12) in using external supports. d 30 W. Monroe St. • Map K4
Center ) Federal Flanked by Ludwig Mies
van der Rohe’s federal buildings, this plaza (1959–74) contains Alexander Calder’s striking statue Flamingo (1974). d 219 S. Dearborn St. • Map K4
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d 175 N. State St. • Map K4
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Beaux Arts-style theater is a symbol of Chicago. Built in 1921, today it is a performance venue.
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Reserve Bank & Federal This impressive structure
is one of 12 regional Reserve banks. When it was first built in 1922, it had the largest bank vaults ever constructed.
d 230 S. LaSalle St. • Map K4
@ This 1929 structure was Civic Opera House
inspired by Paris’s Opera Garnier. Inside, there are gleaming marble floors, crystal chandeliers, and a grand staircase (see p48).
Center £ Symphony At the heart of this center is
Orchestra Hall (1904), the home of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. A major 1997 extension added offices and the Rhapsody restaurant (see p48).
St. Patrick’s Church $ Old Chicago’s oldest church (1856)
is crowned by two towers – one Romanesque, one Byzantine – symbolizing East and West. d 700 W. Adams St. • Map J4
% This historic landmark was Fine Arts Building
long, rectangular slab (1974) is covered in thousands of tiles that depict the cycle of the seasons.
d First National Plaza, at Dearborn and Monroe • Map K4
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Seasons ) Four Chagall’s glittering 70-ft (21-m)
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that was designed by Holabird and Roche in 1923. Under the majestic spire is a 35-seat chapel.
court headquarters, Daley Plaza is best known for its giant steel unnamed Picasso sculpture (1967), donated by the artist. It was mocked when unveiled, but is now a city icon. d Map K4
167$7 ( 67 5 ( ( 7
^ A Gothic-inspired structure Chicago Temple
Plaza ( Daley The location of the county
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d 410 S. Michigan Ave. • Map L5
destroyed in the Great Chicago Fire (see p34). The current grand hotel is the third version and is lavishly decorated with frescos, Tiffany light fixtures, and marble floors (see p116).
1& $1 $/ 6C7
designed by Solon S. Beman and completed in 1885. It was used as a carriage showroom by the Studebaker Company.
House Hilton * Palmer The first Palmer House was
Around Town – The Loop
Left Civic Opera Building Center Old St. Patrick’s Church Right Palmer House Hilton
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73
Around Town – The Loop
Left Artwork for sale in Gallery 37 Center Clock at Macy’s Right Poster Plus
Shops
! Macy’s Once Marshall Field’s,
Chicago’s oldest and best-known department store continues to be famous for its elaborate Christmas displays, dazzling Tiffany dome, and iconic clock. Established nearly 100 years ago, it offers top styles for home and body (see p58). d 111 N. State St. • Map K2 • DA
Basement @ Filene’s Here you’ll find some
fantastic budget-friendly buys and once-in-a-lifetime bargains on bridge, designer, and even couture goods. d 1 N. State St. • Map K4 • DA
fraction of the original prices lure bargain hunters to this charming little sister of the upscale and pricey Nordstrom. d 24 N. State St. • Map K4
Plus & Poster This enormous store opposite
The Art Institute of Chicago (see pp8–11) sells contemporary, vintage, and collectors’ posters, as well as artsy gifts. d 200 S. Michigan Ave. • Map L6 • DA
37 Store * Gallery Teenage artists involved
Sears returned to State Street in 2000 offering five levels of everything from tools to toddler outfits.
in an arts training program create the incredible paintings, sculptures, and other artwork sold here. All proceeds from sales are returned to the program. d 66 E. Randolph St.
d 2 N. State St. • Map K2 • DA
• Map L4 • DA
Avenue Bookshop $ Prairie This wonderful bookstore is
Navy ( Old This regional flagship store
£ After 18 years away, a hipper Sears on State
74
Rack ^ Nordstrom High style on sale at a
the world’s largest that is dedicated to architecture and related fields. It’s a staple for architecture students, but also a fascinating browse for anyone. d 418 S. Wabash
offers the ultimate Old Navy shopping experience, with two floors of discount jeans and Tshirts, and other casual comfort clothes at bargain prices.
Ave. • Map K4 • Closed Sun • DA
d 35 N. State St. • Map K2 • DA
Center % Jeweler’s On the strip commonly
Ries Tobacco ) Iwan A smoker’s paradise since
known as “Jeweler’s Row” this one-stop-shop is a friendly place to source gold, pearls, watches, diamonds, and gems at relatively low prices. d 5 S. Wabash Ave. • Map
1897, this store now sells around 100 cigar brands, 15,000 pipes, and countless smoking accessories. It also contains a small tobacco museum. d 19 S. Wabash
K4 • Closed Sun • DA
Ave. • Map K2 • Closed Sun • DA
Store opening hours are at least from 10–5pm (Chains & Department Stores to 8pm) Mon–Sat & 11–6pm Sun.
Price Categories $ $$ $$$ $$$$ $$$$$
Price categories include a three-course meal for one, a glass of house wine, tax, and a 15–20% tip.
under $20 $20–$30 $30–$45 $45–$60 over $60
Places to Eat & Drink
! Nine This hip restaurant specializes
in steaks and seafood. There’s also a champagne bar and the Ghost Bar for drinks and dancing. d 440 W. Randolph St. • Map J4 • 312-575-9900 • Closed Sat lunch & all day Sun • $$$$$
@ Everest The restaurant on the top
floor of the Chicago Stock Exchange has dazzling views and to-die-for chocolate soufflé. d 440 S. LaSalle St. • Map K5 • 312-6638920 • Closed lunch, Sun & Mon • $$$$$
£ Rhapsody A perfect choice for modern
American food (like the signature onion-crusted sturgeon) before or after a concert. d Symphony Center, 65 E. Adams St. • Map L4 • 312786-9911 • Closed Sat lunch & Sun, except on concert days • $$$$
$ Rivers In the summer the deck of this
elegant riverside restaurant offers some of the best views of the city. d 30 S. Wacker Dr. • Map J4 • 312559-1515 • Closed Sat lunch & Sun • $$$$
Famous Deli & Ada’s Walk right in for generous
portions of deli favorites such as matzo ball soup and stuffed cabbage. d 14 S. Wabash Ave. • Map K4
• 312-214-4282 • $
Café * Atwood Expect top-notch hotel
dining, where creative American cuisine leans toward comfort food. d Hotel Burnham, 1 W. Washing-
ton St. • Map J4 • 312-368-1900 • $$$$
Village Restaurants ( Italian Choose between upscale
Vivere, The Village with its extensive menu, or mid-priced La Cantina – all under one roof. d 71 W. Monroe
St. • Map K4 • 312-332-4040 (Vivere), 312332-7005 (The Village & La Cantina) • Days closed vary • $$$–$$$$ • No DA
Tea Time ) Russian A spirited taste of Russia,
where the vodka flows freely and the beef stroganoff is a crowdpleaser. d 77 E. Adams St. • Map L4 • 312-360-0000 • $$$$
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evenings. Don’t miss the key lime pie. d 35 W. Wacker Dr. • Map K3 • 312-
Around Town – The Loop
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75
Around Town – Near North
Left Merchandise Mart Center Tiffany vases Right Carl Hammer Gallery, River North Gallery District
Near North
H
ISTORY, CULTURE, AND COMMERCE collide on Chicago’s densely-
packed Near North side. This area is a pleasure to explore on foot, whether motivated by a penchant for shopping or an appreciation of fine art and architecture. The city’s toniest shopping boulevard – the Magnificent Mile, a.k.a. the Mag Mile – bridges the posh 19th-century mansions of the lakeside Gold Coast (which has its own clutch of upscale boutiques) and the former industrial warehouses of River North, now mostly converted into art galleries. In addition to these, two local art museums prove that “exhibitionism” in Chicago isn’t just about the Art Institute (see pp10–11). But ultimately, it’s the Magnificent Mile on a Saturday that says more about Midwestern vitality and giddy American consumerism Observation Deck, John Hancock Center than any other Chicago experience.
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Previous Pages James R. Thompson Center
Fourth Presbyterian Church
Map K3 • Free • DA • Tours 1pm Mon & Fri, call 312-527-7762, Adm. cash only
Magnificent Mile
! Whether you’re a shopper Magnificent Mile
or not, this store-lined strip warrants a visit if only to get a feel for the commercial pulse that seems to keep Chicago humming (see pp26–7).
Hancock @ John Center
of $ Museum Contemporary Art
One of the country’s largest collections of international contemporary art, the MCA displays over 6,000 objects, from painting and sculpture to photography and video installations. Trendy Spago chef Wolfgang Puck runs the airy café, which draws both museum-goers and Mag Mile shoppers alike. In summer, the terraced sculpture garden enhances the MCA experience, while the front lawn often plays host to displays of performance art. d 220 E. Chicago Ave.
Around Town – Near North
premier interior design trade showrooms. When completed in 1930, the four million-sq-ft (390,000-sq-m) building was the largest in the world. Today, it is second only to the Pentagon in size, and is still the world’s largest commercial building. A 90-minute guided tour includes a visit to several showrooms. d 300 N. Wells St. •
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill designed this 1970 landmark using the signature X’s on the facade as cross-braces to help the 1,100-ft (335-m) • Map L2 • Open Tue–Sun building withstand the Sculpture, Museum of 10am–5pm (to 8pm Tue) • winds coming off Lake Contemporary Art Adm. (free on Tue) • DA Michigan. An alternative to soaking up the view River North Gallery District from the 94th-floor observatory is Said to be the most condrinking it in from the Signature centrated art hub in the US Room restaurant and lounge on outside of Manhattan, this the floors directly above. Many district is jammed with great say you get a better view from galleries. Most are to be found here than from the South Side’s in the handsome, 19th-century, Sears Tower – and the lines are converted brick warehouses usually shorter too. d 875 N. Michifound along either side of the El gan Ave. • Map L2 • Observatory open 9am–11pm daily, Adm., DA • Signature Room brown line. Huron and Superior Streets are particularly worth a open 11am–2:30pm Mon–Sat, 10am–2pm visit. d Bounded by Merchandise Mart Sun, 5–10pm Sun–Thu, 5–11pm Fri & Sat, DA
%
£ This massive two-squareMerchandise Mart
block edifice houses Chicago’s
(south), Chicago Ave. (north), Orleans Ave. (west), Dearborn St. (east) • Map K3 • Chicago Gallery News 312-649-0064 • www.chicagogallerynews.com
79
Around Town – Near North
Water Tower, modeled after a medieval castle, was once called a “monstrosity” by critic Oscar Wilde. It now houses the City Gallery (specializing in photography), and the fountain and chairs outside make it a focal point for downtown street life. The Water Pumping station across the street still functions, and also houses a visitor center and the Lookingglass Theater, cofounded by Friends star David Schwimmer. d Map K2 • Water
Stained glass, Fourth Presbyterian Church
Coast Area ^ Gold Chicago boasts many
Pumping Station & Tower 163 E. Pearson St., Visitor Center open 8am–7pm Mon–Thu, 8am–6pm Fri, 9am–6pm Sat, 10am–6pm Sun, 877-244-2246 • City Gallery open 10am–6:30pm Mon–Sat, 10am–5pm Sun, Free, 312-744-6630, DA
* Tribune Tower
upscale neighborhoods, but Topped by flying butnone more historic and prestitresses, this Gothic-style gious than the Gold Coast. Railbuilding was completed in road, retail, and lumber tycoons 1925. Its faux historic design built this elegant district in the had won a competition decades following the Great organized by Colonel Robert Fire of 1871 (see p34), and its McCormick, publisher of the leafy streets are lined with Chicago Tribune, the news19th-century mansions interpaper whose offices still spersed with early 20thoccupy the building. Look century apartment buildings. closely at the facade, which is There are no less than embedded with over 120 300 designated historic stones collected by correlandmarks in the Astor spondents from famed Street District alone, sights. There’s a rock including buildings by hailing from each of the Stanford White (such as 50 states, as well as 20 E. Burton Place), and Historic Water Tower fragments from interCharnley House, designed national monuments such by Louis Sullivan (assisted at the as Greece’s Parthenon, India’s Taj time by Frank Lloyd Wright). Mahal, and The Great Wall of (1365 N. Astor Street). d Map K1 China. d 435 N Michigan Ave • Map L3 • Tours by appointment
&
Historic Water Tower & Pumping Station
When the Great Fire of 1871 swept north, only the 1869 Water Tower and Pumping Station escaped ruin. Built by William W. Botington, the castellated Gothic-Revival
80
Presbyterian Church ( Fourth The first Fourth Presbyterian
church, dedicated in 1871, celebrated its first sermon just hours before it was incinerated in the Great Fire. Rebuilt in 1914 when
Map K2 • Open 9am–6pm daily • Free • DA
Chicago ) Hershey’s When candy-manufacturer
Milton Hershey visited the city of Chicago in 1893, he purchased the equipment that he would use to revolutionize the chocolate industry. With mass production he was able to lower the cost of manufacturing milk chocolate, once a luxury item, making it affordable to all. Today, the Hershey Foods Corporation is the largest North American producer of chocolate and non-chocolate confectionary. Hershey’s Chicago, a new themed store on Magnificent Mile, stocks all the well-known brands such as Hershey’s, Reese’s, and Kit Kat, as well as the latest products and goods unique to the Chicago store. Sugar-free versions of the most popular products are also available. A hit with children is the store’s interactive “bake shoppe” where visitors can customize cookies, cupcakes, and brownies. d 822 N Michigan Ave • Map L2
A Day in the Near North Morning Line up early with the locals for a fortifying stack at The Original Pancake House (22 E. Bellevue Pl.). Afterward, stroll south on Rush Street to Oak Street. Take a left and walk the most exclusive shopping block in the city, where you can pop into stores such as Barneys New York. Once you hit Michigan Avenue, it’s a short jaunt to the John Hancock Center(see p79) and its sky-high views. Back on terra firma, cross the street to the Historic Water Tower for a closeup look at a piece of Chicago’s history. Lovers of modern art should cross Michigan again and head to the Museum of Contemporary Art (see p79) with its spacious galleries and sculpture garden.
Around Town – Near North
Magnificent Mile was the littleused Pine Street, today’s church offers a peaceful respite from the now highly commercial boulevard. Designed by Ralph Adams Cram, one of the architects behind New York’s Cathedral of St. John the Divine, it’s not surprising that this church boasts a cathedrallike interior, with an impressive stained-glass west window. A tranquil courtyard is often the place for classical concerts in summer. d 126 E. Chestnut St. •
Afternoon Everyone will get what they want for lunch at Foodlife, a gourmet food court on the second level of the mall in Water Tower Place (see p26). You can shop the seven floors of Chicago’s first ever vertical mall, and then shop some more – and sightsee – along the Magnificent Mile (see pp26–7). If you’ve worked up an appetite, stroll over to the Drake Hotel (see p115) for high tea, which serves until 5pm.
Evening Alternatively, NoMI in the Park Hyatt Chicago (see p115) serves stylish contemporary fare (reservations needed), as befits the neighborhood. Or just join the smart set over cocktails at the Bar at the Peninsula Chicago (see p115).
Store sign for Hershey’s Chicago
81
Around Town – Near North
Left American Girl Place Right Paper Source
Shopping American Girl Place ! Ultimo ^ Oak Street’s toniest designer Parents accompanying girls boutique, Ultimo carries a range of cutting-edge European and American lines for women.
d 114 E. Oak St. • Map L1
New York @ Barneys This branch of the Big Apple’s downtown department store draws together the latest cosmetics, shoes, jewelry, accessories, and men’s and women’s apparel in a minimalist, open-plan, tri-level space. d 25 E. Oak St. • Map L1
age four to 12 make a beeline to this store, the only retail outlet of the popular American Girl line of dolls. A theater and café (see p57) supplement three floors devoted to dolls, books, and accessories. d 111 E. Chicago Ave. • 312-943-9400 • Map L2
& Anthropologie Women’s apparel with a
bohemian bent and housewares gathered from around the world sell briskly at this loft-like store. d 1120 N. State St. • Map K2
£ An outpost of New York’s Bloomingdale’s
hometown department store that features in-store designer boutiques and a well-stocked shoe department. d 900 N.
Michigan Ave. • Map L2
$ Ikram Launched by a former Ultimo buyer, Ikram specializes in highend women’s fashion sold at top dollar. Chic wares and lines change seasonally, but shop assistance is uniformly personal.
d 873 N. Rush St. • Map L2
Lauren % Polo/Ralph This massive four-story shop
82
.O.S.H. * PRecalling the days of elegant
steamships and grand hotels, this store uses old-fashioned suitcases and steamer trunks to lovingly display vintage china and silverware engraved with hotel and ship logos. d 613 N. State St. • Map K2
Source ( Paper This arty River North shop is
part art supply store, part stationer. The creative selection of cards and small gifts includes handmade stationery, cloth-covered sketchbooks, and novel desktop accessories. d 232 W. Chicago Ave. • Map J2
By Nite Gallery ) Fly Amid the River North fine art
so thoroughly transforms itself from a store to a swell den devoted to Lauren’s to-the-manorborn lifestyle – note the horse and hound paintings throughout – that it warrants a visit from even the less well-heeled among us. d 750
galleries, Fly By Nite sells Art Nouveau and Art Deco decorative arts, including malachite jewelry, art-glass lamps and vases, and collectible pottery.
N. Michigan Ave. • Map L2
d 714 N. Wells St. • Map K2
Most Near North shops are open 10am–7pm Mon–Sat & 11am6pm Sun and have DA.
Price Categories Price categories include a three-course meal for one, a glass of house wine, tax, and a 15–20% tip.
$ $$ $$$ $$$$ $$$$$
under $20 $20–$30 $30–$45 $45–$60 over $60
Places to Eat & Drink Grill ! Frontera Chef Rick Bayless’ regional
Pazzo ^ Coco In the gallery district Coco
K2 • 312-661-1434 • Closed Sun & Mon • Reservations only for groups of 5+ • $$$
• Map K3 • 312-836-0900 • Closed Sat & Sun lunch • $$$$$
@ Keefer’s A steakhouse that goes
& Kevin Chef Kevin Shikami has struck
Mexican cuisine warrants the twomargarita waits that inevitably face diners here. d 445 N. Clark St. • Map
Pazzo prepares dramatic, earthy Italian cuisine in an impressive loft space. d 300 W. Hubbard St.
beyond the men’s club stereotype, also serving French specials and ample fish selections.
out alone, offering a daily-changing menu that puts an Asian spin on French cuisine. Enjoy a tuna tartare and favorite cocktail at the wood and slate bar. d 9 W. Hubbard St. • Map
d 20 W. Kinzie St. • Map K3 • 312-4679525 • Closed Sun & lunch Sat • $$$$$
Around Town – Near North
Frontera Grill
L3 • 312-595-0055 • Closed Sun • $$$$$
# A wine bar of warehouse Bin 36
Room * Pump A jazz trio, opulent decor,
proportions, Bin 36 engenders an infectious enthusiasm for wine and food. The many small dishes encourage sampling. d 333 N. Dear-
and a forward-leaning continental menu serve diners here. Celebrities love its famed “booth 1.”
d 1301 N. State Pkwy. • Map K1
born St. • Map K3 • 312-755-9463 • $$$
• 312-266-0360 • $$$$
$ An in-store steakhouse and RL
Bar & Grill ( Whiskey Run by Rande Gerber,
power-eatery, furnished in upper crust style by the Ralph Lauren Home shop while elegantly attired hostesses sport Polo.
husband of supermodel Cindy Crawford, this sophisticated, sleek bar attracts a trendy crowd. d 1015 N. Rush St. • Map L2
d 115 E. Chicago Ave. • Map L2 • 312-475-1100 • $$$$
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lounge, the Zebra is intimate, friendly, and decorated wall to wall in animal prints. It’s a funky place to drink cocktails in the Gold Coast. d 1220 N. State St. • Map K2 • 312-642-5140
Unless otherwise stated, all restaurants recommend reservations, accept credit cards, have DA, and are open for lunch and dinner.
83
Around Town – Northside
Left Armitage/Halsted Shopping District Right Butterfly, Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum
Northside
E
NCOMPASSING PARTS OF OLD TOWN, Lincoln Park, Lakeview, and
Wrigleyville, Chicago’s Northside boasts upscale restaurants and chi-chi boutiques galore, as well as some of the city’s best bars and one of its most progressive theater companies, the Steppenwolf (see p48). Older buildings have been transformed into beautiful condominiums, while stylish new apartments are springing up on empty lots. In season, nearby Wrigley Field fans bolster the lively Wrigleyville atmosphere by swarming the surrounding streets and bars – whether or not the Cubs win. The vibrant gay hub of “Boys Town” is also in this area, while running along Northside’s eastern border is the incredible lakefront, with sand volleyball and a beach bar heating up as soon as the temperature allows.
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Park Zoo ! Lincoln Who’s watching who at this
Field @ Wrigley Built in 1914, this is the USA’s
oldest National League baseball park. Home team, the Chicago Cubs, haven’t won a World Series championship since 1908 (before the field even existed), but that doesn’t stop Northsiders from being behind them every step of the way. In season (March– September), spending an afternoon cheering on the “Cubbies” in this marvelous stadium, with its ivy-clad walls, is a quintessential Chicago experience. d 1060 W. Addison St. • Map D1 • 1-773404-2827 • Box Office open 8am–6pm Mon–Fri, 9am–4pm Sat & Sun • Adm. • DA
£
Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum
This museum’s sloping, beige exterior was inspired by the sand dunes that once occupied its site. Inside are a host of engrossing interactive exhibits, the highlight being the walk-through Butterfly Haven, a light-filled space, constantly aflutter. The outdoor grounds, with their native wild-
Boys Town
flowers and prairie grasses, are perfect for a peaceful walk or rest. d 2430 N. Cannon Dr. • Map F3 • 773755-5100 • Open 9am–4:30pm Mon–Fri, 10am–5pm Sat & Sun • Adm. • DA
Around Town – Northside
beloved city zoo, which attracts more than three million visitors annually (see pp24–5).
Town $ Boys Strolling down North Halsted
Street, it’s fairly evident you’re in Chicago’s gay neighborhood when you hit shops called Gay Mart, Cupid’s Treasures, and a club named Manhole. Just 30 years ago, this area – officially East Lakeview – was pretty shabby, the bars were without signs, and parking was a cinch. But now buzzing Boys Town is gay central – by day and by night.
d N. Halsted St. (& much of Broadway) from Belmont Ave.–Grace St., & Clark St. from Belmont–Addison Aves. • Map E1–2
% Armitage/Halsted Shopping District
This area of unique boutiques is a boon for fashionistas. Dozens of shops here sell everything from sophisticated evening wear to high-end accessories. Many of the stores occupy renovated Victorian town homes, set along pretty, tree-lined streets. d Armitage Ave. from Halsted St.–Racine Wrigley Field
Ave., & Halsted St. from Webster– Armitage Aves. • Map E4
For more Chicago shopping See pp58–9
85
Around Town – Northside
Lincoln Park Conservatory
History Museum ^ Chicago Focusing on Illinois and
Chicago history since settler days, this museum was established in 1856 and is the city’s oldest cultural institution. One of the society’s first donors bequeathed his collection of Lincoln memorabilia: the ex-president’s deathbed is one of the items displayed. Visitors can climb aboard the Pioneer locomotive, while events such as the World’s Columbian Exposition and the Great Chicago Fire (see p34), are brought to life by photographs, decorative arts, and other exhibits. There are also costumes belonging to famous figures, from George Washington to sportsman Michael Jordan. d 1601 N. Clark St. • Map K2 •
Open 9:30am–4:30pm Mon–Sat (8pm Thu), 12–5pm Sun • Adm. (free Mon) • DA
Chicago Historical Society
86
Park Conservatory & Lincoln Take a free trip to the tropics
at this spacious conservatory, just next to Lincoln Park Zoo. Opened in 1893, the glass structure is a year-round, 80° F (40° C) sanctuary from the Chicago’s bustle, and offers a welcome respite from the city’s long winters. Paths meander past lush palms, flourishing ferns, and exquisite 100-year-old orchids. Avoid the crowds by coming on a weekday when, unless a seasonal show is taking place, it’s a quiet space, with the sound of trickling water as background music. d 2400 N. Stockton Dr. • Map F3 • Open 9am–5pm daily • Free • DA
Avenue Beach * North When summer finally graces
Chicago with its presence, locals of all ages and nationalities converge on this short, but inviting stretch of beach. Running along its edge is the lakefront path, where cyclists, in-line skaters, runners, and walkers stream by. An outdoor gym gives confident folks a place to strut their stuff, sand volleyball courts allow the energetic to let off steam, and the rooftop bar of the steamshipshaped beach house is perfect for downing a cool drink while lazily watching the activity below. d Lakeshore Dr. & North Ave. • Map F4 • Open dawn to dusk • Lifeguards on duty from Memorial Day–Labor Day.
For more on Chicago parks and beaches See pp 62–3
National Memorial ( Elks Building
Lakeview Ave. • Map E2 • Open 9am–5pm Mon–Fri; mid-Apr–mid-Nov also open 10am–5pm Sat & Sun • Free • DA
Morning Fuel up for the day at one of Lincoln Park’s favorite breakfast joints, Frances’ (2552 N. Clark St.), where they serve a wonderfully fluffy French toast. Afterwards, stroll east down Wrightwood Avenue, and you’ll pass the ornate Francis Dewes Mansion. Keep walking until you come to the Lincoln Park Zoo (see pp24–5), where you can take a ride on the wild side on the African Safari motion simulator, complete with 3D visuals. Then see all the animals in person, before breaking for lunch with a view at Café Brauer, built in 1908 by Prairie School architect Dwight Perkins.
Dewes Mansion ) Francis Nostalgic German immigrant
Afternoon
503 W. Wrightwood Ave. • Map E3 • 773865-6819 • Tours by appointment only
Evening
Francis Dewes, a self-made millionaire, commissioned this elaborate home in 1896. Built in the eclectic Gründerzeit style – a German counterpart to Beaux Arts – its entrance steps, stone statues, and ornate carved curlicues certainly stand out from the neat rows of adjacent brick apartment buildings. Interior highlights include mosaic floors, a fountain, and wrought-iron chandeliers. d
Around Town – Northside
The Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, an American fraternity (founded in 1868 and still going strong), built this magnificent structure in 1926 to honor its World War I veterans. It’s since been re-dedicated to pay homage to World War II, Korean and Vietnam war veterans. Two largerthan-life elk statues flank the wide entrance steps, while inside, every inch is richly decorated. The 100-ft (30-m) marble rotunda, murals depicting the Sermon on the Mount, intricate windows, and allegorical bronze sculptures are awe-inspiring. d 2750 N.
Exploring Northside
During warm weather, head to the lakefront along Fullerton Avenue where you can stroll, rent bikes, sunbathe, or even brave the ever-chilly Lake Michigan waters. In colder months, catch a bus (nos. 22 or 151) and immerse yourself in the exhibits at the Chicago Historical Society, or take a five-minute cab ride to Armitage/Halsted Shopping District (see p85) for some classy retail therapy.
This part of town has an abundance of good eateries: hop the El four stops or cab it to try Mia Francesca’s (see p41), a lively Italian trattoria where the pasta dishes are big enough for two, and there’s an excellent wine list. Still going strong? Round off your day with a visit to Kingston Mines (see p46) – just a short cab-ride away – to hear some of best blues that the city has to offer.
Francis Dewes Mansion
87
Around Town – Northside
Left Barker & Meowsky Right Cynthia Rowley
Shops Fine Lingerie ! Isabella This charming boutique has something silky, soft, and sexy for women whose sizes range from barely there to 44JJ. You’ll also find teddies, bustiers, pajamas, and nightgowns.
boutique for its romantic and flirty vintage fashions and jewelry. It also sells new items with a retro feel. d 3309 N. Clark St. • Map F4
d 1101 W. Webster St. • Map E3
Leigh Gallery & The Set in the heart of Lakeview,
Rowley @ Cynthia Internationally acclaimed
clothing designer Cynthia Rowley grew up in Chicago, so it’s fitting that one of her upscale boutiques is here. Her collection of dresses, accessories, and separates is trendy and feminine.
d 808 W. Armitage Ave. • Map E4
Designer Shoes £ Lori’s Devoted shoe hounds flock
to this Lincoln Park store for its hot styles at discounted prices. The floors and walls are stacked high with boxes for handy selfserve try-on access. d 824 W.
Armitage Ave. • Map E4
$ Beatnix This store boasts the best
supply of costumes and vintage gear in the city, including wigs, distinctive mod jewelry, and make-up, as well as day-to-day items. d 3400 N. Halsted St. • Map E2
Bookstore % Unabridged Known for its large gay and
lesbian section, this Boys Town (see p85) bookstore also stocks books of all types, particularly kids’ and Spanish language books. d 3521 N. Broadway. • Map E2
88
^ Hubba-Hubba Women appreciate this
this gallery provides an inviting setting for art suited to all tastes, from modern to old-school classic, watercolor to sculpture. d 3306 N. Halsted St. • Map E2
& Meowsky * Barker Four-legged friends are the
focus at this store. From ceramic dog bowls to catnip-filled toys, rhinestone-studded collars to cookie-shaped dog biscuits, this store is a pet’s best friend. d 1003 W. Armitage Ave. • Map E4
Fun ( Uncle This toy store is especially
fun for grownups who yearn to feel like a kid. You’ll find retro items like Mr. T coloring books, silly accessories like oversized sunglasses, and gag gifts like the tried-and-true whoopie cushion. d 1338 W. Belmont Ave. • Map E2
Apparel ) American Simple, functional, and wildly
popular, this manufacturer and retailer of clothing for men, women, kids, and dogs, which hails from Los Angeles, lays particular emphasis on well-made basics in bright colors and at reasonable prices. d 3126 N. Broadway • Map E2
Most of these stores are open from at least 11am–7pm Mon–Sat & noon–5pm Sun, unless otherwise stated, and they all have DA.
Gay & Lesbian Bars & Clubs
! Circuit/Rehab At Circuit, men often dance
Kat Lounge & ^ Kit Supper Club
shirtless to grinding house music. In contrast, the Rehab lounge bar is a sophisticated chill-out spot.
Martinis come in 52 flavors at this swanky spot, where female impersonators divert attention from significant others with their lip-synching talent. d 3700 N.
d 3641 N. Halsted St. • Map E2 • Circuit: open Thu–Sun, Adm.
Halsted St. • Map E2 • Closed Mon
Closet @ The This dance club attracts a
& Berlin For 20 years, this edgy club
mostly lesbian crowd, but gay men and straight couples also groove to R&B, rap, dance, and diva videos. d 3325 N. Broadway
has attracted every type from straight girls to drag queens. After midnight, the dance floor hits its peak, rocking with a stellar sound system and light show. d 954 W.
• Map E2
Tavern £ Roscoe’s A young, preppy set packs
Around Town – Northside
Left Kit Kat Lounge Right Bucks Saloon
Belmont Ave. • Map E2
* Cocktail This laid-back club is ideal
this neighborhood bar for its antique décor, cozy fireplace, poppy dance tunes, pool table, and, in summer, backyard beer garden. d 3356 N. Halsted St. • Map E2
for sipping must-try martinis, while Boys Town people-watching through wall-to-wall windows.
d 3359 N. Halsted St. • Map E2
$ Find some of the best Sidetrack
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cruising at this vast, four-room bar with more than two dozen video monitors that 4IFSJEBO highlight a different theme (like show tunes or 1980s music) : * 5 $ & ( 5 2$ ' every night. d 3349 N.
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bar (for boys and girls) where deer, elk, moose, and buck heads adorn the walls. The outdoor beer garden is wild in summer. d 3439 N. Halsted St. • Map E2
Unless otherwise stated, all bars and clubs do not charge admission, are open daily, and have DA. On weekends many stay open ‘til 4am.
89
Around Town – Northside
Left Guthrie’s Tavern Right Decorative Brickwork at Schubas Tavern & Harmony Grill
Neighborhood Bars Tavern & ! Schubas Harmony Grill
Barleycorn ^ John Memorial Pub
Twenty-somethings dress down for beer, live music, and a great restaurant that packs in crowds, especially on the patio during warm-weather weekends. d 3159
Disguised as a laundry during Prohibition, this cozy pub has been dispensing beer and spirits for over a hundred years. d 658 W. Belden Ave. • Map E3
N. Southport Ave. • Map D1
Lion Pub & Red British ex-pats hang here for
@ This casual, family-owned Four Farthings Tavern
a taste of home that fits the bill with plenty of pints from across the pond. Upstairs is an outdoor deck for warm-weather carousing.
bar is a perfect spot to kick back with one of 18 beers on tap, a single-malt whisky, or a glass of wine. d 2060 N. Cleveland Ave. • Map E3
d 2446 N. Lincoln Ave. • Map E3
Louie on the Park £ Bar With the chain’s signature
Lanes & Billiards * Southport During the day, this is a laid-
wrap-around bar and bright mosaics, this bar is a comfortable favorite for young professionals who appreciate the moderately priced drinks, plenty of tap beers, and huge sandwiches.
back bar: at night, a rowdy young crowd covets turns at the four hand-set bowling lanes. d 3325 N. Southport Ave. • Map D1
Tap ( Wrightwood The centrally positioned bar,
d 1800 N. Lincoln Ave. • Map E3
promotes an open, Cheers-type feel, with conversation flowing among patrons. TVs typically air This Scottish pub hits the college sports, while mark, with nearly 90 4IFSJEBO dart boards provide varieties of single-malt - B LF . J DI J H B O participatory enterwhisky and plenty of "EEJTPO tainment. d 1059 W. Celtic paraphernalia 4PVUIQPSU and music. d 2913 N. Wrightwood Ave. • Map E3 #FMNPOU
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dance club, Tin Lizzie is wall-to-wall with twenty- to thirtysomethings most weekend nights, when DJs spin a variety of tunes. d 2483 N. Clark St. • Map F4
Unless otherwise stated, all bars and clubs are open daily and have DA. At weekends many stay open until 2/3am.
Price Categories Price categories include a three-course meal for one, a glass of house wine, tax, and a 15-20% tip.
$ $$ $$$ $$$$ $$$$$
under $20 $20–$30 $30–$45 $45–$60 over $60
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^ Tarasacas Mexican food gets a fancy
• 1-773-477-5845 • Closed Mon, lunch (except Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, & Sun) • $$$$
Clark St. • Map F4 • 1-773- 549-2595 • Closed lunch (except Sat & Sun) • $$
@ Ambria Tuxedoed staff set an ele-
No. 1 Ribs & Robinson’s The perfect, low-key spot for
former skaters “warming house”) serves up American gourmet cuisine. d 2610 N. Cannon Dr. • Map F3
touch at this colorful restaurant. Nights get spirited as diners down huge margaritas. d 2585 N.
gant tone at this French specialoccasion favorite. d 2300 N. Lincoln
getting messy with thick, saucy barbecue ribs. A back patio opens during warm weather. d 655 W.
Park West • Map F3 • 1-773-472-5959 • Closed lunch, Sun • $$$$$
Around Town – Northside
North Pond
Armitage Ave. • Map E4 • 312-337-1399 • Closed Mon, Sat lunch • No DA • $$
Trotter’s £ Charlie Light French food is artfully
Kitchen & Tap * Stanley’s Comfort food, like macaroni
designed by master chef Charlie Trotter at this internationally acclaimed restaurant. d 816 W.
cheese and apple pie, is the draw at this family-friendly spot. The allyou-can-eat brunch gets packed.
Armitage Ave. • Map E4 • 1-773-248-6228 • Closed Mon & Sun, lunch • $$$$$
d 1970 N. Lincoln Ave. • Map E3 • 312642-0007 • Closed Mon lunch • $$
$ The ultimate fondue in a Geja’s Café
Sather ( Ann Known for its scrumptious
romantic setting. Choose cheese or hot oil, or just opt for the divine chocolate dessert fondue. d 340
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generous portions of flavorful pastas, seafood, and chicken at this lively eatery is definitely worth it.
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d 3311 N. Clark St. • Map F4 • 1-773-281-3310 • Closed lunch • $$$
Unless otherwise stated, all restaurants recommend reservations, accept credit cards, have DA, and are open for lunch and dinner.
91
Around Town – South Loop
Left Adler Planetarium Right Shedd Aquarium (left) & Field Museum (right), Museum Campus
South Loop
J
UST SOUTH OF THE business-centric Loop, this sprawling area mixes ethnic
enclaves such as Chinatown (founded in the 1870s by migrant transcontinental railroad workers) with uppercrust addresses, built after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 (see p34). The region has many Chicago “must-sees,” but the jewel in the crown is undisputedly the impressive Museum Campus: here, the Field Museum, John G. Shedd Aquarium, and Adler Planetarium celebrate the wonders of the earth, sea, and sky respectively, collectively drawing over four million visitors each year. The highway that once separated the Field from its neighbors has been replaced by an inviting green campus, where cyclists and skaters join museum-goers on the plant-bordered paths in fair weather.
Sights 1 2 3 4 5 6
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Museum ! Field One of the three lakefront
G. Shedd Aquarium @ John The second of the three
Museum Campus sights, the Shedd is also one of the oldest public aquariums in the world. Dive in to discover the many treasures of the aquatic world (see pp22–3).
Planetarium £ Adler This, the first planetarium in
Blues Heaven Foundation
fashionable – and Chicago’s ritziest. Only a few of its mansions remain today, of which two are open to the public (by tour only): the imposing, RomanesqueRevival 1887 Glessner House, and Chicago’s oldest remaining building – Clarke House – built in 1836 in the GreekRevival style by New York emigré Henry B. Clarke.
the Western Hemisphere, completes the Museum Campus trio. Visit its numerous galleries to walk among the stars, explore the worlds that orbit the Sun, and be enlightened by 1,000 years d Map C5 • For info on walkingof astronomical discovery. tours (Jul–Sep, on alternating Don’t miss the opportunity weekends) call 312-326-1480 to catch the Sky Theater • Clarke House, 1827 S. Indiana show, which is projected on the 68-ft (21-m) dome Ave., tours noon, 1 & 2pm Wed– of the historic Zeiss planSun, adm., DA • Glessner House, etarium. The virtual reality 1800 S. Prairie Ave., tours 1, 2 & 3pm events in the StarRider Figurine, Field Museum Wed–Sun, adm., no DA Theater are also aweinspiring, launching you into the Blues Heaven Foundation outer reaches of space and even Located in the former studios give you the chance to interact of Chess Records, where blues with the show via a panel in the greats from Muddy Waters to armrest. d 1300 S. Lake Shore Dr. • Map Willie Dixon once recorded, Blues Heaven has an interesting collecM6 • Open summer (Jun–Sep) 9:30am–6pm tion of records, photos, and stage daily; winter 9:30am–4:30pm daily; first Fri costumes dedicated to Chicago’s each month 9:30am–10pm; for showtimes blues style and its performers. call 312-922-7827 • Adm. • DA Chess music plays on the PA, and there are occasional live performPrairie Avenue District ances. Rock aficionados will note Of the wealthy enclaves the address is the namesake of a both north and south of the Rolling Stones song. d 2120 S. Chicago River that grew up Michigan Ave. • Map C5 • For tours call 312following the Great Fire of 1871, 808-1286 • Closed Sun • Adm. • Limited DA Prairie Avenue was the most
Around Town – South Loop
institutions to occupy the 57-acre (23-ha) Museum Campus, this vast museum boasts a collection of more than 20 million fascinating natural history and anthropological artifacts (see pp14–15).
%
$
Feel like playing the blues? At Blues Heaven Foundation, staff say they can teach visitors the harmonica in 10 minutes.
93
Around Town – South Loop
documentary. Changing exhibitions also present a healthy mixture of local talents and wellestablished ones, such as Gary Winogrand and William Eggleston. Frequent gallery talks give curators and artists the chance to discuss the shows with museum-goers. d 600 S. Michigan Ave. • Map L5 • Open 10am–5pm, Mon– Fri (to 8pm Thu), noon–5pm Sat • Free • DA Fresh produce, Maxwell Street Market
Street Market ^ Maxwell Both 19th-century European
Chinatown Gate spanning Wentworth Avenue, Chicago’s immigrants and 20th-century Chinatown isn’t that large – running African-American settlers fleeing roughly eight blocks – but it is the Deep South got their entrecolorful. Home to Chicago’s oldest preneurial start selling from pushAsian community, Chinatown was carts around Maxwell Street. In founded in the 19th century by 1994 the market was relocated to transcontinental railroad workers make way for the new University fleeing West Coast prejudice. It of Illinois at Chicago and, continues to be a place while a shadow of its where Cantonese and former self, it still Mandarin are spoken makes for a vibrant far more widely than Sunday morning. English. Stroll WentDon’t expect worth to see the valuable finds; ornate On Leong do expect plenty of Tong Building, buy Mexican housewares fresh almond cookies and used tools. But the from Chinese bakeries, Architectural detail, occasional treasure, peruse the many Chinatown such as a vintage fur import and herbal coat, does show up. shops, or chow down Perhaps the best reason to visit is in one of the dozens of local to try the homemade tacos from restaurants. d Around Wentworth Ave. the Mexican food stalls that line & Cermak Rd. • Map B5 the street. d 548 W. Roosevelt Rd.
• Map J6 • Open 7am–3pm Sun • Free
of Contemporary & Museum Photography Run by and located in Columbia College Chicago, this museum is one of a kind in the Midwest. It exhibits the portfolios of international modern masters, with shows (including student shows) tending toward the experimental rather than the traditional
94
* Chinatown Crowned by the landmark
Vietnam ( National Veterans Art Museum
A moving tribute to the horrors of war, this museum, started in the late 1970s, now showcases over 1,000 works by more than 130 artists once involved in the conflict. Most of the artworks, which include paintings, sculptures, and drawings, as well as prose and poetry, come from former US soldiers, doctors and
Exploring South Loop Morning
POWs, though powerful entries by former Viet Cong and native Cambodians attest to the universal effects of the conflict. d 1801 S. Indiana Ave. • Map C5 • 312-326-0270 • Open 11am–6pm Tue–Fri, 10am–5pm Sat • Adm. • DA
) When European immigrants
Jane Addams’ Hull House
were flooding Chicago to work in its rail and stock yards during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Jane Addams bought Hull House for a specific purpose. From here, she offered social services and facilities to this immigrant working class, including day care, employment counselling and art classes. A great social reformer and winner of the 1931 Nobel Peace Prize, Addams also championed the rights of women and helped usher in child labor laws. Her original office, furnishings, and artwork are still in place for visitors to see, supplemented by temporary exhibits that tell the story of the settlement at Hull House and the invaluable work of its residents. d 800 S. Halsted St. • Map H5 • Open 10am–4pm Tue–Fri, noon–4pm Sun • Free • DA
Around Town – South Loop
R. R. Yonkha’s This Is How You Died, National Vietnam Veterans Art Museum
Start by grabbing coffee and an oreo cookie flapjack at The Bongo Room (1152 S. Wabash Ave., 312-291-0100). From there, walk through Grant Park to Museum Campus. Here you can choose between the Field Museum (see pp14–15), Adler Planetarium (see p93), and Shedd Aquarium (see pp22–3) all within walking distance of each other. If you plan to visit other museums on your trip, it makes sense to purchase a City Pass (see p108). If you opt to see the highlights of each, end up at the Shedd, where the Soundings restaurant offers good food and great views overlooking the lake.
Afternoon Hail a cab (plenty wait outside the museums) or walk to the nearby pedestrian bridge at 18th Street to get to the Prairie Avenue District (see p93), where you can stroll the historic streets and maybe even catch the 3pm tour of the Glessner House (see p93). If you’ve still got the energy, walk one block west to the fascinating National Vietnam Veterans Art Museum.
Evening Head over to Wabash Avenue for an early supper at one of the trendy eateries on what is now a burgeoning strip. Mayor Richard Daley has been known to frequent Gioco (see p97) for its stellar Italian fare (reservations are recommended). Ready for more? Then stay up late to hear the blues at Buddy Guy’s Legends (see p96).
95
Around Town – South Loop
Left Diners, Hawkeye’s Bar & Grill Right Bar Louie Taylor
Bars & Clubs Guy’s Legends Bar Louie Taylor ! Buddy & Run by bluesman Buddy Guy, One of several popular Bar this club is arguably the city’s best. To get a table, come early and dine on decent barbecue.
d 754 S. Wabash Ave. • Map L5
Louies in town, this Little Italy outpost plies generous martinis (and great bar food) to a twentysomething crowd. d 1321 W. Taylor St. • Map H6 • Free
@ Not-for-profit Hothouse serves * Beviamo Wine Bar This dark, intimate Little Italy up a gumbo of music in art-filled Hothouse
digs. Acts range from jazz to Afropop, with a smattering of poetry readings and performance art.
d 31 E. Balbo Dr. • Map L5
Lounge £ MListen to traditional and
modern jazz in style on comfy couches and low-slung seating in cranberry, chocolate, and sage. Stop by for live jazz on Wednesdays.
d 1520 S. Wabash Ave. • Map K6
Velvet Lounge $ The Ignore the threadbare decor;
The Velvet Lounge offers some of the city’s best jazz including jam sessions with the bar’s owner, a saxman himself. d 67 E. Cermak Rd.
• Map B5 • Cash only • Closed Mon
% NetWorks A popular gathering place,
hideaway is a great place to cozy as a couple before or after dinner with one of 40 by-the-glass wines, or a “sampling flight” of three wines. d 1358 W. Taylor St. • Map H6 • Free • Closed Sun
Park Tap ( Vernon Also known as Tu fano’s, this
popular bar counts legions of local and celebrity fans who pile in for house wine and generous, inexpensive pastas. d 1073 W. Vernon Park Pl. • Map H5 • Free • Closed Mon
Bar & Grill ) Hawkeye’s Try this sports bar for beer-
fueled camaraderie and a genuine slice of Chicago fan zeal. A shuttle bus even delivers patrons to the United Center and US Cellular Field. d 1458 W. Taylor St. • Map H6 • Free • No DA
NetWorks airs news and sports on an array of TVs. d Hyatt Regency
McCormick Place, 2233 S. Martin Luther King Dr. • Map D5 • Free
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under $20 $20–$30 $30–$45 $45–$60 over $60
Places to Eat
! Phoenix Phoenix attracts dim sum
stuffed pastas round out the offerings. d 1531 W. Taylor St. • Map
• Map A6 • 312-328-0848 • $$
on Taylor & Francesca’s The Little Italy branch of Wrig-
diners from near and far. Go early on weekends or prepare for long waits. d 2131 S. Archer Ave.
@ Trendsetter Opera serves Opera
contemporized Chinese food in a former 1930s warehouse. Don’t miss the five-spice squid and slow-braised pork. d 1301 S. Wabash Ave. • Map K6 • 312-461-0161 • Closed lunch • $$$$
£ Gioco Rustic Italian food is the draw
at this stylish restaurant and onetime speakeasy. d 1312 S. Wabash Ave. • Map K6 • 312-939-3870 • Closed lunch Sat & Sun • $$$$
H6 • 312-421-5179 • No reservations • $
leyville’s Mia Francesca offers generous portions of refined Italian cuisine at reasonable prices.
d 1400 W. Taylor St. • Map H6 • 312-8292828 • Closed lunch Sat & Sun • $$$
Cafe * Rosebud Its Italian cooking isn’t
daring but Rosebud’s convivial vibe is hard to resist. Long waits for tables are common. d 1500 W.
Taylor St. • Map H6 • 312-942-1117 • Closed lunch Sun • $$$
Firehouse ( Chicago The menu at this former fire
station is best at its most basic, including burgers and sandwiches.
$ Located in the Chinatown
d 1401 S. Michigan Ave. • Map L6 • 312-
Ave. • Map C5 • 312-326-5040 • $
) Penang Chicago’s only Malaysian
Lao Szechuan
Square shopping mall, this simple eaterie serves authentic Chinese Szechuan cuisine. d 2172 S. Archer
% A quaint French bistro in the Chez Joel
786-1401 • Closed lunch Sat & Sun • $$$$
restaurant. Ask your server to recommend the best dishes on the menu. d 2201 S. Wentworth Ave. • Map C5 • 312-326-6888 • $$
d 1119 W. Taylor St. • Map H6 • 312-2266479 • Closed lunch Sat, Sun & Mon • $$$$
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Around Town – South Loop
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97
Around Town – Far South
Left South Shore Cultural Center Right University of Chicago Campus
Far South
W
ITH MAGNIFICENT ARCHITECTURE, interesting ethnic enclaves, and stand-
out museums, Chicago’s Far South encompasses districts such as Hyde Park and Kenwood that merit a journey off the beaten tourist track – despite being bordered to the south by some less-than-welcoming neighborhoods. Hyde Park and Kenwood began life as suburbs for the wealthy escaping the dirty city; today, this part of town is a fascinating melting pot of University of Chicago students and Mexican, Asian, African-American, and Indian residents. Recreation and leisure opportunities abound on spectacular tracts of green space, including the University of Chicago’s Midway Plaisance and Jackson Park, site of the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition (see p19). Sights 1
Museum of Science and Industry
2 3
University of Chicago
4
South Shore Cultural Center
5
Oriental Institute
DuSable Museum of African-American History
6 7
Robie House
8 9
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of Chicago @ University Noted for its research and
high educational standards, this remarkable private university has produced over 70 Nobel Prize winners (see pp28–9).
Museum of £ DuSable African-American History
Annie Malone exhibit, Dusable Museum
p115), this grand Mediterraneanstyle structure was bought and lovingly restored by the Chicago Park District when the country club fizzled out in the 1970s. Extravagant landscaping and flower beds complete the pretty picture, making it a popular spot for weddings and festivals, as well as for all kinds of performances and classes. Its golf course, nature park, and the public beach behind it add to its many draws. d 7059 S.
Located on the eastern edge of the beautiful Washington Park, this museum is named after Chicago’s first non-native settler, Jean Baptiste Point du Sable. The permanent exhibits here celebrate other firsts, such as the first black US astronaut, Major Robert Lawrence, and Chicago’s first and only AfricanAmerican mayor, Harold Washington. Thoughtprovoking exhibits include rusted slave shackles and the “Freedom Now” mural, depicting 400 years of African-American history from the early days of slavery to Civil Rights marches. Bust (c. 1840 BC),
Around Town – Far South
The largest science museum within a single building in the Western Hemisphere, this museum attracts an amazing two million people a year (see pp16–19).
Shore Dr. • Map F6 • Open 9am–6pm Mon–Fri, 9am– 5pm Sat • Free (except classes) • DA
% Oriental Institute
Learn about the origins of agriculture, Oriental Institute the invention of writing, d 740 E. 56th Pl. • Map D5 the birth of civilization, • Open 10am–5pm Tue–Sat, and the beginning of the study of noon–5pm Sun • Adm. (free Sun) • DA arts, science, politics, and religion at this University of Chicago South Shore departmental museum. Its five Cultural Center galleries showcase ancient Near How ironic that this bustling arts Eastern civilizations from about and community center, which 3500 BC to AD 100, and the serves a largely African-American exhibits were largely unearthed demographic, began in 1905 as an during the department’s own exclusive country club that barred excavations. d 1155 E. 58th St. minority members. Designed by • Map E6 • 10am–6pm Tue–Sat (to the team who later worked on 8:30pm Wed), noon–6pm Sun • Free • DA the elegant Drake Hotel (see
$
99
Around Town – Far South
House ^ Robie This splendid 1909
residence by Frank Lloyd Wright is easily spotted by its steelbeam roof, which overhangs the building by 20 ft (6 m) at each end. Take a tour through its low-ceilinged interior, Frank Lloyd Wright tables and chairs in Robie House and past more than 170 art-glass windows and doors, Washington Park Frederick Law Olmsted and to gain insight into the ongoing, Calvert Vaux, the designers of extensive ten-year restoration New York’s Central Park, also program. The building was a private created this 371-acre (150-ha) home until 1926, when it became green space for Chicago resia dormitory for the Chicago Theodents in the early 1870s. It logical Seminary. It was later originally attracted mainly bought by a development firm, wealthy city dwellers who who donated it to the Univerenjoyed parading around sity of Chicago in 1963, the the scenic space. Today, it’s same year it was designated a beautiful and widely a National Historic Landmark. used park with recreational d 5757 S. Woodlawn Ave. • Map E6 • programs, the DuSable Tours 11am, 1pm, 3pm Mon–Fri, every Museum of African30 min 11am–3:30pm Sat & Sun, American History, and call: 708-848-1976 • Adm. adults $12, Lorado Taft’s striking children and seniors $10 • No DA 110-ft (34-m) long sculpture, Fountain of Kenwood Time, which took him 14 Historic District years to build. It is A world apart from some of the Far South’s dicier Detail of Taft’s Fountain unwise to venture into areas, this wealthy of Time, Washington Park the park after dark. enclave within Kenwood, d Map D5 • Open founded by John A. Kennicott in dawn–11pm (approx) • Free • DA 1856, has mansions that must be seen to be believed. In the late Osaka Japanese Gardens 19th century this area was an At the north end of Jackson upscale Chicago suburb, where Park’s serene Wooded Island wealthy residents built majestic (which is excellent for birdhomes on spacious lots, a rarity watching), lies this hushed rein the quickly booming city. A treat, complete with meandering stroll around the district uncovers paths, lagoons, and fountains. architectural styles ranging from The extraordinary garden is a Italianate and Colonial Revival to partial re-creation of the one Prairie style, by influential figures formed in 1934 around the such as Howard Van Doren Shaw beautiful Japanese Pavilion that and Frank Lloyd Wright (see pp30– had been built for the 1893 31). d Boundaries: E. 43rd St. (north), E. Expo, but which sadly burned 51st St. (south), S. Blackstone Ave. (east), down in 1946. The gardens were and S. Drexel Blvd. (west) • Map E5 renamed in 1993 for one of
*
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100
For more on Frank Lloyd Wright architecture See pp30–31
Chicago’s sister cities, Osaka, which donated the Japanese gate seen here. d Jackson Park, 58th St.
of Chicago ) University Sculptures
Strolling around the University of Chicago campus, there’s more of visual interest than its buildings alone. Over the years, the university has acquired around 12 outdoor sculptures, including Wolf Vostell’s whimsical 1970 Concrete Traffic, a car embedded in concrete at the southwest end of the Midway Plaisance and the sobering Nuclear Energy, a bronze by Henry Moore that resembles a mushroom cloud. Set within a reflecting pool at 60th Street and University Avenue is Construction in Space in the Third and Fourth Dimension, a soaring abstract piece created in the 1950s by Constructivist Antoine Pevsner, which visually depicts the spacetime continuum (see p28–9).
Morning Mingle with University of Chicago students over good coffee and great pancakes at the Original Pancake House (see p103), where the sweet, baked Apple Dutch Baby is a must-try. From there, walk about a mile (1.6 km) south or hop on the no. 28 bus at the corner of Hyde Park Boulevard and Lake Park Avenue to visit the Museum of Science & Industry (see pp16–19), where you can easily spend an engrossing few hours exploring the hands-on exhibits. For lunch, skip the museum food and head west about a mile (1.6 km) to Medici (see p103), a great student and faculty hangout, known for its delicious pizzas. The extravagant Garbage Pizza is a favorite.
Around Town – Far South
& Lake Shore Dr. • Map F6 • Open dawn–dusk • Free • DA
Exploring Far South
Afternoon Stroll about four blocks southwest to the Oriental Institute (see p99) at the University of Chicago (see pp28–9) whose museum will transport you back to ancient times. Its Suq gift shop offers unique souvenirs, such as a replica of an ancient board game. Just east of the institute is Frank Lloyd Wright’s masterpiece of Prairie-style architecture, Robie House. Take a tour of this to really gain some insight into the great man’s vision. Then stroll around the university’s leafy quadrangles if it’s good weather, or backtrack a little to the Smart Museum of Art (see p28) if you’d rather be inside. Either way, round off your day with some good ol’ home-style Southern cooking at the no-frills Dixie Kitchen (see p103).
Osaka Japanese Gardens
For more on Chicago parks and gardens See pp62–3
101
Around Town – Far South
Left Leather shoes, Collections Right House of Africa
Shops Bookstore ! Powell’s Here, used books in top
condition are stacked floor to ceiling on painted wood shelves, with antique editions protected behind glass. d 1501 E. 57th St. • Map E6
Designer Shoes ^ Alise’s Shop for the latest men’s and
women’s designer shoe fashions from Italy, France, Brazil, and the Far East, as well as ladies’ bags, fine jewelry, and men’s belts. d 5210C S. Harper Ave. • Map F5
@
Seminary Co-op Bookstore
Housed in the basement of the Chicago Theological Seminary on the University of Chicago campus, it’s fitting that this bookstore has a well-respected academic section, especially humanities and social sciences. d 5757 S. University Ave. • Map E5
Street Books £ 57th This basement-level shop
carries new fiction, children’s books, and African-American interest titles. Low ceilings, brick walls, and a painted cement floor all create a cozy atmosphere, conducive to browsing.
d 1301 E. 57th St. • Map E6 • No DA
Co-op Market $ The Mingle with the melting pot of shoppers at this cooperative market, where aisles are dominated by organic, vegetarian, and international foodstuffs. d 1526 E.
Etc. & Toys, This inviting store focuses
on non-violent toys galore. Goodold standbys include kites, facepainting kits, balls, and dress-up clothes. d 5211 S. Harper Ave. • Map F5
Black * Little Pearl Workshop
The gift shop at this children’s arts program and cultural arts center sells the students’ amazing creations, such as one-of-a-kind painted furniture and vibrant mosaics. d 1060 E. 47th St. • Map E5 • Closed Sun
( Collections Chic club clothes and look-
at-me leather shoes are sparsely displayed along the walls in this boutique. Many of the designs are straight off Italian runways, while others are custom-made by the shop’s owner. d 1360 E. 53rd St. • Map E5 • Closed Sun
55th Street • Map E5
% The scent of sandlewood House of Africa
102
21 ) Artisans This gallery showcases
incense fills this small boutique that sells African artifacts, carved wooden sculptures, and CDs of music from all over the continent.
locally made art. You can purchase designs both to wear and to show, from whimsical ceramics to fringed silk scarves and handpainted jackets. d 5225 S.
d 1352 E. 53rd St. • Map E5 • Closed Sun
Harper • Map F5 • No DA
Most of these shops are usually open at least 10am–6pm Mon–Sat and noon–5pm Sun, and unless specified have DA
Price Categories $ $$ $$$ $$$$ $$$$$
Price categories include a three-course meal for one, a glass of house wine, tax, and a 15–20% tip.
under $20 $20–$30 $30–$45 $45–$60 over $60
Places to Eat Folie ! LaAn Petite upscale French restau-
fill you up for next to nothing at this BYO spot. d Kimbark Plaza, 1618
d 1504 E. 55th St. • Map E5 • 1-773-493-
Restaurant & Nile The extensive menu at this
rant offering a fixed-price menu, as well as entrées featuring ingredients such as rabbit and quail. 1394 • Closed Mon, Sat & Sun lunch • $$$
Caffé @ Florian This no-reservations hangout
for pizza and pasta also specializes in mile-high cakes, rich with chocolate, strawberry, coconut, and thick frosting. d 1450 E. 57th St. • Map E6 • 1-773-752-4100 • $$
Café £ Calypso In this feel-good Caribbean
joint, jerk chicken is a favorite, and Key Lime pie is the must-do dessert. d 5211 S. Harper St. • Map H6 • 1-773-955-0229 • $$
Kitchen $ Dixie & Bait Shop
A taste of America’s South, serving fried catfish, crawfish étouffée, and jambalaya in a setting reminiscent of an old bait shop. d 5225 S. Harper Ave. • Map F5 • 1-773-363-4943 • $$
E. 53rd St. • Map E5 • 1-773-324-6227 • $
Middle Eastern diner makes decisions difficult, but combination plates let you try an assortment.
d 1611 E. 55th St. • Map E5 • 1-773-3249499 • $ • No DA
Tap * Woodlawn A casual dress code, good
Around Town – Far South
Dixie Kitchen and Bait Shop
food, and cheap beer attract all types to this bar especially for burgers and hearty soup. d 1172 E.
55th St. • Map E5 • 1-773-643-5516 • $$
Yellow ( Mellow This laid-back eatery offers
specialties of rotisserie chicken and sweet or savory crepes. There’s also a separate bar.
d 1508 E. 53rd St. • Map E5 • 1-773-6672000 • $
Pancake House ) Original This homey breakfast haven
does everything well, but its signature dish is the apple pancake.
d 1517 E. Hyde Park Ave. • Map E5
on 57th % Medici Great pizza draws the crowds,
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but sandwiches on home-baked bread and rich milkshakes are also offered. d 1327 E. 57th St.
• 1-773-288-2322 • Closed dinner • $
Unless otherwise stated, all restaurants recommend reservations, accept credit cards, have DA, and are open for lunch and dinner.
103
STREETSMART Planning Your Trip 106
Getting Around 108 Useful Information 109 Chicago on a Budget 110 Tours & Cruises 111 Tips on Health & Security 112 Shopping Tips 113 Accommodation & Dining Tips 114 Places to Stay 115–119
CHICAGO’S TOP 10
Arriving in Chicago 107
Streetsmart
Left Christmas lights Center Wrapping up warmly Right Spring Tulips, Magnificent Mile
Planning Your Trip to Go ! When For a moderate climate the best time to visit is spring or fall. But if you can bear the snow and bitter cold of the festive season you’ll see Chicago sparkle with magical Christmas lights – and you’ll have a lot fewer tourists to contend with. Summer sees street festivals and live music in the parks. Avoid November visits, as the city’s hotels are filled by conventioneers during this month.
@ Weather Chicago winters are usually intemperate with heavy snow and temperatures ranging from 13° F (-9° C) to 37° F (4° C). Summer days can be anything from balmy to boiling, averaging 69° F (22° C) to 84° F (30° C). Extremes, like winter blizzards, heavy spring rains, and summer heat waves are not uncommon, with spring-time weather being particularly changeable. Despite the winds that can gust off Lake Michigan, Chicago’s “Windy City” moniker is actually attributed to the verbose bid the city made to host the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition (see p19).
What to Pack
£ Pack lightly for summer, and bring layers for the unpredictable spring and fall conditions. Layers are best for the often desperately cold winters, in order to cope with
106
centrally heated environments. A hat and suitable footwear are essential then too. While casual clothes are acceptable in most places, men should bring a jacket and tie, since they are required at many upscale restaurants.
checks in case of emergency. These can be changed at most banks and foreign exchange on showing photo ID, and can also be used in stores and restaurants.
$ Insurance It is strongly recom-
driver’s licenses are valid in Chicago – if they are in English. Bring your picture license even if you don’t plan to rent a car: it’s a good alternative to a passport if you are asked for proof of age in a bar.
ended to have a comprehensive travel insurance policy, including coverage for trip cancellation, lost luggage, car rental insurance and, most of all, medical expenses, which are very high in America.
& Visas % Passports Citizens of European Union countries, New Zealand, Australia, and Japan can spend up to 90 days in the US without a visa. They just need a valid passport and a round-trip ticket. Canadian citizens must only show photo ID and proof of residence. Citizens of other countries should contact their local US embassy well in advance of their trip to obtain the relevant visa.
^ Money Do bring some dollars with you for essentials on arrival. But from then on, major credit cards are accepted in most places. ATMs abound, but check with your own bank to avoid the extra fee charged for using ATMs of nonaffiliated US banks. It’s also worthwhile bringing a few US dollar traveler’s
License & Driver’s Foreign or out-of-state
Current & * Electric Phone Adapters Electrical appliances in US operate on 110–120 volts and use two-prong plugs. This means that non-US, single-voltage appliances need an adapter and transformer, available in airport shops, and at many electrical stores and large department stores.
( Discounts If you have student or senior ID, it’s a good idea to carry it with you to make the best of discounts offered on everything from public transit and hotels to admission to the main attractions.
Zone ) Time Chicago operates on Central Time (six hours behind GMT). Daylight saving begins at 3am on the first Sunday in April and reverts to standard time at 1am on the last Sunday in October.
Arriving in Chicago Interna! O’Hare tional Airport One of the world’s busiest airports, O’Hare lies 20 miles (32 km) northwest of downtown Chicago. Serving most major airlines, this airport is big and spread out. Use the free Airport Transport System (ATS) to access the three domestic terminals, the international terminal, parking areas, and the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) (see p108) station. d 1-800-832-6352, www.ohare.com
@ Connections from O’Hare Taxis are available on a first come first served basis from the lower level of the Arrivals terminal. Out of rush hours it can take around 45 minutes to reach Downtown. Car rental agencies are also at hand, near the baggage claim areas in terminals 1–3, and via courtesy telephones from terminal 5. Alternatively, shuttle buses, limos, and trains can take you into Chicago. For the latter, follow the “Trains to City” signs to the CTA Blue Line, the cheapest and – at 40 minutes – often the quickest way into town.
Midway Airport
exit M5; car rental agencies are located in the main terminal building; and shuttle buses leave from in front of it. Alternatively, follow signs from the terminal to the CTA station: the Orange Line brings you downtown in less than 30 minutes. d 1-773-838-0600
$ Immigration Landing cards and customs forms are distributed on the plane. Foreign nationals have to join a separate line to have these and their passports inspected after landing. Strict security checks, involving the taking of photographs and fingerprints, are now in place for those arriving in the US on a visa.
Buses % Shuttle These operate from both airports. Continental Airport Express will drop off at (and pick up from) any requested downtown location: Omega Airport Shuttle buses operate between the two airports. To catch a shuttle, go to the information counter at Baggage Claims. d Continental Airport Express: 1-888284-3826 • Omega Airport Shuttle: 1-773-483-6634
Limousines
£ Located 10 miles (16 ^ Several limo compakm) southwest of Downtown, this recently renovated airport serves mostly budget airlines, as well as a few major ones. Taxis are available from
nies, including Amm’s and Chicago Express Limousine, offer private door-to-door services: book 24 hours in advance. Rates are higher than taxi
fares, and tips should be 10–15%. d Amm’s: 1-773792-1126 • Chicago Express Limousine: 1-800-527-2137
Streetsmart
Left Blue Line Train sign Center Amtrak train Right O’Hare Airport
Rental & Car You usually have to be over 25 with a valid license to rent a car. Reputable agencies such as Avis (800-331-1212) and Hertz (800-654-3131) are at both main airports and throughout the city. A deposit will be required. Collision damage waiver and liability insurance are highly recommended.
Train * By Over 40 Amtrak trains serve Union Station each day. The nearest El stop is at Clinton, but it’s a good walk, so it is often better to take a cab or bus to your destination. d 210 S. Canal St., 1-800-872-7245
Bus ( By Catch long-distance buses from Greyhound’s main downtown terminal. Then catch a cab to your destination, or walk one block north to take the El from Clinton station. d 630 W. Harrison St., 1-800-231-2222
Car ) By Interstate highways into Chicago are I-55 from the southwest, I-57 from the south, I-88 from the west, I-90 from the east and northwest, and I-94 from the east and north. Route 66 from Santa Monica, CA joins I-55 before hitting Downtown.
107
Streetsmart
Left Water Taxi Center Trolley Bus Right Cyclists on the lakefront path
Getting Around El ! The Short for elevated train, the El is nevertheless the name given to the entire CTA-run train network, including the sections that travel underground. The five major and three minor lines are identifiable by color: red, green, blue, brown, orange, pink, purple, and yellow. Some lines run 24 hours a day (less often off-peak). Trains arrive every 5–20 minutes, and the service is fast and economical. d CTA: 773-836-7000 www.transitchicago.com
Buses
@ The CTA also operates an extensive network of buses, especially useful for reaching the lakefront, which is not served by the El. Look for the blue and white stops. Some also serve PACE buses that cover the city suburbs and are numbered 208 and higher. d CTA: as above • PACE: 1-847-364-7223 www.pacebus.com
transit cards £ CTA & passes A regular El or bus fare is $1.75, with an extra 25¢ for a transfer card (valid for two transfers within two hours of purchase), and you need exact change. However if you buy a Transit card with a preset value at a station ticket office, or get a topup Transit card and charge it with the desired amount at a machine, the relevant
108
fare is then deducted from your pass each time you take a ride. One- to fiveday Visitor Passes are also available from stations, visitor centers, and selected tourist attractions.
$ Metra Metra, the commuter rail system, serves the city’s suburbs. Fares vary according to the journey’s length. Downtown stops are Union Station, LaSalle Street Station, Ogilvie Transportation Center (see p37), and Randolph Street Station. d Metra: 312-3226777 (Mon–Fri) or 773-8367000 (RTA Travel Information), www.metrarail.com
% Taxis It is usually easy to hail a cab Downtown; elsewhere it’s better to call for one. There’s an intial charge, then a fee per mile and per extra passenger. A 10–15% tip is expected. Companies include: d Checker Taxi Assoc. 312243-2537 • Flash Cab Co. 1-773-561-1444 • Yellow Cab Co. 312-829-4222
Taxis ^ Water In summer, Wendella Riverbus (312-337-1446) runs water taxis between the Wrigley Building and both Union Station and the Ogilvie Transportaion Center. Shoreline Water Taxi (312-222-9328) also offers a service every 20 minutes from Navy Pier (see pp20–21) to the John G. Shedd Aquarium and near the Sears Tower.
Buses & Trolley From Memorial Day to Labor Day (see 109), free daytime trolley buses run on four routes from downtown El and Metra stations to the Museum Campus, the Art Institute of Chicago, State Street and Michigan Avenue shopping areas, Navy Pier – and on weekends they run to Lincoln Park and Chinatown/Pilsen (see pp52–3). Look for the green and red Free Trolley signs.
* Walking Exploring most Downtown and Northside areas (such as the Mag Mile or Lincoln Park) on foot is fine. However, avoid walking south of the South Loop after dark.
( Cycling Only confident cyclists should consider city travel as the roads are so busy. However, the 18 miles (29 km) of lakefront bike paths are very pleasant. To get a Chicago Bike Map call 312742-2453. Bike Chicago rents bikes and conducts bike tours from Navy Pier: call 1-800-915-2453 or visit www.bikechicago.com
) Driving Chicago’s grid system (see street index), makes orientation relatively straightforward. However, expressways are often snarled, the Loop’s oneway streets can be very confusing, and finding parking Downtown can be a huge, costly problem.
Useful Information ! Information Centers Chicago has two main tourist information centers: in the Chicago Cultural Center (see p69) and in the Historic Pumping Station (see p26). Opening hours are at least 10am– 6pm. You can also get further information by contacting the City of Chicago’s Tourism Hotline (1-877244-2246), the Chicago Convention and Tourism Bureau (312-201-8847), or the Illinois Bureau of Tourism (1-800-226-6632).
@ Websites Information about Chicago can be found on several reliable websites, such as www.choose chicago.com and www. 877chicago.com. For indepth reviews of where to go and what to see, log onto www.metromix.com, affiliated to the Chicago Tribune. Internet cafés include the national chain Screenz (773-348-9300).
5); ABC (Channel 7); WB (Channel 9); WTTW Public TV (Channel 11); and Fox (Channel 32).
$ Events For a complete list of what’s on in Chicago see www.877chicago.com, or pick up the Chicago Reader – a free paper that comes out every Thursday, available in restaurants, bars, and other venues. Chicago is known for its conventions, some so large that conventioneers almost take over the city. Check the “Convention Calendar” at www.choose chicago.com, to see if your visit coincides with any.
% Tipping Plan to tip for most services: waitstaff expect 15–20%; bell hops and porters $1 per bag; hotel maids about $2 per night; bartenders up to $1 a drink.
^ Telephones Most public phones
accept coins or phone cards (calls to Directory Assistance are free). The city’s two main Chicago has two area daily newspapers are the codes: 312 for downtown Chicago Tribune and the and the immediate vicinity; Chicago Sun-Times. The most popular radio stations 773 for the rest of the city. Dial 1 plus the area code include: WNUA (95.5 FM) for any US number outside for jazz, WFMT (98.7 FM) the area code you are in. for classical, WLUP (97.9 To dial abroad, key 011 + FM) for rock, and WGCI (107.5FM) for R&B. WBBM country code + city code (780 AM) is a news station, (omitting any initial 0). If you and WSCR (670 AM) keeps need to rent a cell phone, try International Sound you up to date on sports. For local TV, there’s a wide (1-800-353-2100). AT&T, range to choose from: CBS Nextel, and Sprint are the (Channel 2); NBC (Channel largest mobile networks.
£
Media
& & Families Disabled Visitors Chicago Parent magazine (www.chicagoparent.com) has a monthly calendar of kids’ activities. Information on disabled accessibility to the city’s main attractions is published by the Mayor’s office at www.accessible chicago.org.
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Left No smoking sign Center Visitors Information center Right Disabled sign
* Smoking & Drinking Smoking is prohibited in many public spaces in Chicago, so check for no smoking signs before lighting up. The legal age for the purchase or consumption of alcohol is 21, and the law requires photo ID as proof.
( Consulates In emergencies, your consulate may give assistance. d Australia: 123 N. Wacker Dr., 312-419-1480 • Canada: 180 N. Stetson Ave., 312-616-1860 • Great Britain: Wrigley Building, 400 N. Michigan Ave., 312-970-3800 • Ireland: 400 N. Michigan Ave, 312-337-1868
Holidays ) Public New Year’s Day (Jan 1); Martin Luther King Day (3rd Mon in Jan); President’s Day (3rd Mon in Feb); Casimir Pulaski Day (1st Mon in Mar); Memorial Day (last Mon in May); Independence Day (July 4); Labor Day (1st Mon in Sep); Thanksgiving (4th Thu in Nov); Christmas Day (Dec 25).
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Left Lakefront recreation Center Hot Tix sign Right Public Art, North Michigan Avenue
Chicago on a Budget Admission ! Free Days
Tix % Hot Half-price tickets
Several city attractions such as Lincoln Park Zoo (see p24–5) never charge admission. Others often have one free day per week: bear in mind it might be cheaper, but the crowds can be greater.
for same-day theater performances can be bought in person at Hot Tix booths around the city. There is a slight discount for cash payment and a small fee for ticket processing. To save time fruitlessly waiting in line, check the website for daily listings of availability. d Hot Tix: Chicago Cultural Center, 78 W. Randolph St. • Hot Tix: Waterworks Visitor Center 163 E. Pearson St. • Both closed Mon. • www.hottix.org
Events @ Free Summer in Chicago brings sunshine and lots of free outdoor happenings, especially in Grant Park (see p71). Arrive early to get a good spot, and bring a picnic and warm clothing for after the sun goes down. The Mayor’s Office of Special Events and other sources of information (see p109) will have details of concerts, neighborhood festivals, parades, and more. d Mayor’s Office of Special Events (recorded info) • 312744-3370 • www.cityof chicago.org/specialevents
Tours £ Free The Chicago Office of Tourism (see p109) provides information on a range of great free tours, such as the Cultural Center Tour and the Loop Tour Train (see p111). The volunteer-run Chicago Greeters also offers an insider’s take on the city at no charge (see p111).
Deals $ Dining Many restaurants have good-value “Early Bird Specials” or “pretheater menus.” Look for signs advertising deals.
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Art ^ Public Many famous artists, such as Pablo Picasso and Marc Chagall, have left their artistic mark on the city. Details of public art Downtown are included in a booklet, the Loop Sculpture Guide, which is available at the Chicago Cultural Center and the Waterworks Visitor Center. The University of Chicago (see pp28–9) also has notable works on campus, while Navy Pier has sculpture displays during summer.
& & Parks Recreation Chicago’s many beautiful parks are run by the Chicago Park District. Their excellent facilities include skating areas, beaches, pools, golf courses, tennis courts, and walking and cycling paths. Contact
Bike Chicago (see p111) at Navy Pier to rent bikes or in-line skates. d Chicago Park District: 312-742-7529, www.chicagoparkdistrict.com
Audience * TV Tickets Free tickets for the Oprah and Jerry Springer shows are in demand, so call the hotlines at least a month in advance to avoid disappointment. Audience members generally have to be 18 years of age or over. d Oprah: Harpo Studios, 1058 W. Washington St., 312-5919222 • Jerry Springer: NBC Tower, 454 N. Columbus Dr., 312-321-5365, www.studio audiences.com/daytime
( Special Promotions Throughout the year, the Chicago Office of Tourism (see p109) offers several promotions, such as Winter Delights, which include discounts on lodging, attractions, and meals.
) CityPass This pass grants entry to the Museum Campus trio (see p93); The Art Institute of Chicago; John Hancock Observatory; Museum of Science & Industry; Field Museum; and Shedd Aquarium. It can be purchased online or at any of the participating venues, and is valid for nine days from the first day of use. It offers substantial savings, and you don’t have to wait in line. d www.citypass.com
Tours & Cruises Neigh! Chicago borhood Tours Apart from tours of neighborhoods such as Chinatown and Bronzeville, this company also runs special interest bus trips (on themes like Chicago’s theaters). Tours begin at the Chicago Cultural Center (see p69): call ahead to book. d Chicago Neighborhood Tours: 312-742-1190, www.chgocitytours.com
@ Chicago Architectural
Foundation Tours Learn about the city’s amazing architecture on a Chicago Architecture Foundation (CAF) walking, bike, bus, or (in summer) boat tour. The fascinating trips highlight both historic and modern buildings, including Frank Lloyd Wright’s architectural legacy. d CAF: 224 S. Michigan Ave., 312-922-8687, www.architecture.org
Chicago Tours £ Bike Bike Chicago will guide you through the city’s beautiful parks, neighborhoods, or along the stunning lakefront departing from either of its two locales. d Navy Pier: 600 E. Grand Ave., 312595-9600 • North Avenue Beach: 1-773-327-2706 • www.bikechicago.com
Tours $ Untouchable Follow the trails of some of the city’s most infamous 1920s and ‘30s gangster residents. Sites visited on this two-hour
tour include that of the St. Valentine’s Massacre, Little Italy, and other haunts of the likes of Al Capone and John Dillinger. d Untouchables: 1-773-8811195, www.gangstertour.com
Kayak Tours
% Exercise your mind and your muscles by kayaking down the Chicago River while learning about the city’s history and architecture. There are gangster and ghost themed tours for both beginners and advanced paddlers. d Wateriders Adventure Agents: 312-953-9287, www.wateriders.com
& River ^ Lake Boat Tours Join a narrated tour from the Lake or Wendella boat tour to gain historical or architectural insight from a different perspective. Metro Ducks offer a wackier take with their tours onboard an amphibious WWII craft. d Lake Boat Tours: 312-527-1977, www.chicagoline.com • Wendella Boats: 312-3371446, www.wendella boats.com • Metro Ducks: 1800-298-1506, www. metroducks.com/chicago
Greeters & Chicago Run by the Chicago Office of Tourism (see p109), this free service gives groups of 1 to 6 visitors a chance to benefit from the wisdom of enthusiastic local residents who know and love the city. Choose
from a range of themed or neighborhood tours, and preferably book online seven days in advance. d 312-744-8000, www. chicagogreeter.com
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Left Uptown’s Argyle Street Neighborhood Center Carriage Tours Right Lake Michigan Tours
Train Tour * Loop While circling the Loop (see pp68–75) on an El train (see p69) an expert from the CAF explains the history of significant buildings and the El itself. Free tickets are available at the Chicago Cultural Center (see p69) information desk on a first-come, first-served basis each day. d www. architecture.org, Sat only, May–Sept • DA
Tours ( Carriage For a romantic ride along the waterfront, the Mag Mile, or around the Gold Coast area, book a traditional horsedrawn carriage. A flat fee is charged for a half-hour tour. d Antique Coach & Carriage: 1-773-7359400, www.antiquecoachcarriage.com
Cruises ) Lake Enjoy a meal or cocktails and dancing onboard the elegant Odyssey or Spirit of Chicago cruisers. In summer, schooners Windy I and Windy II, also sail on the breeze. All depart from Navy Pier. d Odyssey: 1-888-741-0281, www.odysseycruises.com • Spirit of Chicago: 312-8367899, www.spiritcruises.com • Windy I & II: 312-595-5555, www.tallshipwindy.com
Check with tour operators as many tours are seasonal.
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Left Osco Drug store Center Lake front in Winter Right Police
Tips on Health & Security Theft ! Preventing As in most cities, the most common crimes are pickpocketing and purse snatching. Common sense can help deter these problems. Leave surplus cash, unnecessary credit cards, and valuables in a safe place at your hotel. Don’t walk around with your wallet in a back pocket, and keep bags securely fastened and close to your body. Do keep a copy of your credit card numbers (and the number to call if they are lost) separate from the cards, and bring photocopies of important documents in case they are stolen.
Public Transport
@ It’s best to avoid
using public transportation late at night. Take a taxi instead. However, when you do take a train, stand well back on the platform until the train has stopped, never sit in an empty carriage, and do not lean against the train doors. Train platforms and trains usually have an intercom in case of emergency.
Your £ Knowing Surroundings Plan your route before setting off so that you know where you are going. If you do get lost, try not to make a big show of consulting your map or guidebook. At night, avoid walking alone in dimly lit areas and in parks. Steer clear of areas beyond the
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south branch of the Chicago River (west of Downtown) and parts of the South Side where crime levels are higher.
Room $ Hotel Safety Make yourself aware of the fire escape route from your room as soon as you arrive. Always keep the door locked, and be sure you know who is knocking before you let anyone in. Valuables are best kept locked in the in-room, or preferably hotel, safe.
% Telephone Hotlines For police, fire, and medical emergencies call 911. If you are not in a position to speak, the emergency locator should still be able to track you. For nonemergency police matters, such as theft, dial 311 to reach the City Helpline. Both numbers can be accessed by cell phones.
Hospitals
^ Hospitals and emergency rooms are listed in the Yellow Pages of the telephone directory. Your concierge will know which one is most convenient. Weiss Memorial Hospital and Northwestern Memorial Hospital are convenient to Downtown and the Northside of the city, while Bernard A. Mitchell Hospital, at The University of Chicago, serves the South Side. d Weiss Memorial Hospital: 4646 N. Marine Dr., Map B3, 1-773-878-8700
• Northwestern Memorial Hospital: 251 E.Erie St., Map L2, 312-926-5188 • The University of Chicago’s Bernard A. Mitchell Hospital: 5815 S. Maryland Ave., Map E6, 1-773-702-1000
& Medical Emergencies In an emergency, call 911 or go directly to the nearest hospital. Even with medical insurance, you may have to pay for services yourself and claim reimbursement after. Contact your insurer before receiving any treatment.
* Dental Emergencies Many dental clinics are open 24 hours. Check with the hotel concierge or contact the Chicago Dental Society for a referral. d Chicago Dental Society: 312-836-7300
( Pharmacies Pharmacies are plentiful throughout the city. Many are open 24 hours. The most popular drug store chains (Walgreens, Osco, and CVS) all have pharmacies inside.
Hazards ) Seasonal Chicago is a city of extreme seasons. Visitors should be prepared for cold, windy, and snowy winters, which can create hazardous conditions. In summer, the extreme heat can cause health problems: ensure you apply sunscreen, wear a hat, and drink plenty of water.
Shopping Tips Hours ! Store Regular store and mall hours are usually 10am to 9pm, Monday to Saturday, and 11am to 6pm Sunday. However, Northside boutiques and stores along the Mag Mile (see pp26–7) often stay open ‘til 7–8pm.
@ Taxes Chicago state and local sales taxes are among the highest in the country at 9 percent on all non-food items.
Periods £ Sales Some Chicago stores have items on sale all year round, but expect real bargains after Christmas, on Presidents’ Day, and on Labor Day (see p109).
$ Department Stores You’re in shopper’s heaven when it comes to department stores in Chicago, which are mostly located on North Michigan Avenue and State Street. They include upscale Macy’s (see p74), practical Sears (see p74), traditional Lord & Taylor, and stylish Bloomingdale’s Home & Furniture Store (see p59). d Lord & Taylor: Water Tower Place, 835 N. Michigan Ave. • Bloomingdale’s: 900 N. Michigan Ave.
Shopping Malls
% There’s no shortage of malls in the city, especially vertical ones on the Mag Mile. Here you’ll
find Water Tower Place (see p26); Westfield North Bridge (see pp56–7); Chicago Place – featuring the Midwest’s flagship Saks Fifth Avenue – and 900 North Michigan Shops. Regular malls are scattered all around the city and its suburbs. d Chicago Place: 700 N. Michigan Ave.
^ Chicago Souvenirs Accent on Chicago and the City of Chicago Store have shelves filled with Chicago mementos (see p59). Authentic local food such as pizza and Eli’s cheesecake can be shipped anywhere in the US by Taste of Chicago. d Accent on Chicago: 875 N. Michigan Ave. • City of Chicago Store: Chicago Waterworks Visitors Center, 163 E. Pearson St. • Taste of Chicago: 1-877-908-2783, www.tastesofchicago.com
Outlets & Discount Look for real bargains at Filene’s Basement, while higher-end men’s and women’s clothing are discounted in the Mark Shale and Gap stores. Good value jewelery can be found at the Jeweler’s Center (see p74), and cheap housewares at Crate & Barrel. d Filene’s Basement: 1 N. State St./ 830 N. Michigan Ave. • Mark Shale Outlet: 2593 Elston Ave. • Gap Outlet: 2778 N. Milwaukee Ave. • Crate & Barrel Outlet: 1864 N. Clybourn Ave.
& Books * Music Borders and Barnes & Noble bookstores are all over the city. But for specialty books and personal service, try the Savvy Traveller or Sandmeyer’s Bookstore. The Virgin Megastore looks cool inside, but for great value CDs check out the back wall racks of the legendary Rolling Stones shop, or go to Reckless Records for used vinyl. d Savvy Traveller: 310 S. Michigan Ave. • Sandmeyer’s Bookstore: 714 S. Dearborn St. • Virgin Megastore: 540 N. Michigan Ave. • Rolling Stones: 7300 W. Irving Pk. Rd. • Reckless Records: 3161 N. Broadway
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Left Broadway Antique Market Right Water Tower Place
& Antiques ( Art For information on art exhibitions, get a copy of Chicago Gallery News, which is available at visitor centers, or head to the River North Gallery District (see p79). Taylor’s Guide to Antique Shops in Illinois and Southern Wisconsin (available in bookstores or by calling 1-847-465-3314) will direct you to the best local antique dealers.
Conversions ) Size Clothing and shoe sizes in the UK, Europe, and the US differ, and conversions are complicated. Look at www.online conversion. com for help with sizes.
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Left Continental Breakfast, Chicago style Right Pizzeria Uno
Accommodation & Dining Tips a Room ! Booking To book a room, contact the Chicago Convention and Tourism Bureau (CCVB). Discounted rates (see below) can be found by checking the Internet on sites such as www. 877chicago.com, calling the hotel directly, or contacting a reputable, nofee reservation service such as Hot Rooms and Hotel Reservations Network. To hold a reservation, a credit card is usually necessary: noshows will be charged. Be sure to specify if you want a smoking or nonsmoking room. d CCVB: 1-877-244-2246, www.choosechicago.com • Hot Rooms: 1-800-4683500, www.hotrooms.com
@ Rates Hotel rates vary according to the hotel category, and the time of week and season. Peak rates are weekdays and from April–December. Rack rates, the basic room rates, are the ones used in this book to provide a guide price. Don’t settle for them! It is almost always possible to get a better deal, so don’t be too shy to ask.
Rooms
£ Usually, the larger the room, the higher the tab, and many, though not all, hotels charge more for a room with a view – so consider how much time you will want to spend in your room
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before you pay the premium. Twin-bedded rooms are uncommon; most double rooms have either a queen- or kingsized bed or two double beds. If staying in a busy area, check to make sure rooms are soundproof.
Bed & Breakfasts
$ Bed & Breakfasts are a great way to see the city from a different perspective. For a list of homes offering guest rooms, check with At Home Inn Chicago, or Illinois Bed & Breakfast Association (ILBBA). Many require a minimum stay of two nights. d At Home Inn Chicago: 1-312-640-1050, 800-375-7084 (toll free) • www.athomeinnchicago.com • ILBBA: 1-888-523-2406 • www.bbonline.com
% Taxes Downtown restaurants add on a 9.5 percent local sales tax to your check, and hotel tax in Chicago is quite high at 15.4 percent (though the suburbs are slightly cheaper). Room rates tend to be quoted without tax.
^ Restaurant Reservations Some restaurants do not take reservations (or only for groups of more than five), while for others, in particular the upscale ones, reservations well in advance are a must, especially on weekends. We indicate a recommendation for the
restaurants listed in this book, but it is always a good idea to call and check, especially if you have special needs or dietary requirements.
Times & Meal Breakfast is usually served in diners and coffee shops from about 6–10am. Lunch is normally available from 11:30am–2pm, and dinner takes place between approximately 5–10pm depending on the establishment. Earlybird dinners, normally served from 5–7pm, are usually a good bargain.
& * Chicago-Style Ethnic Cuisine Deep-dish pizza, hot dogs, and steaks are Chicago’s main specialties. But in a city where a multitude of cultures meet, so do a multitude of cuisines, so check out the city’s many ethnic restaurants (see p42–3).
( Portions You will find that portions vary hugely from place to place. Often portions at upscale restaurants are smaller, while steakhouses and ethnic eateries offer a more than generous serving.
Codes ) Dress Few restaurants have strict dress codes, though some hotel and other upscale restaurants still expect men to wear jackets and ties.
Price Categories For a standard, double room per night (with breakfast if included), taxes and extra charges.
$ $$ $$$ $$$$ $$$$$
under $100 $100–200 $200–300 $300–400 over $400
Luxury Hotels ! Ritz-Carlton The Ritz has it all –
Drake $ The Popular with visiting
superior service, an award-winning dining room, spa, and state-ofthe-art-business facilities. Impressive views complement the classic furnishings and fine art in its spacious guest rooms, but it’s the little things, like Bulgari toiletries and toys and cookies for the kids that puts it in a league of its own. d 160 E. Pearson St. • Map L2 • 312-266-1000 • www.fourseasons.com • $$$$$
celebrities and royalty, this is the grande dame of Chicago hotels, which effortlessly blends modern convenience with the charm of days gone by. Each of the 535 tastefully decorated rooms and suites is unique: many offer breathtaking views. d 140 E. Walton Pl. • Map L2 • 312-787-2200 • www.thedrakehotel.com • $$$–$$$$$
Seasons @ Four Expect the best
This sleek, striking, ultramodern hotel opened in 2003. Spectacular views, sumptuous feather beds, and private baths and showers feature in every room. Plus there is a 24-hour fitness center. d 20 E. Chestnut St. • Map K2 • 312-324-4000 • www. sofitel.com • $$$–$$$$$
in this grand hotel – possibly Chicago’s most elegant. Lavish rooms command sweeping city and lake views, and the award-winning Seasons restaurant is a must try. d 120 E. Delaware Pl. • Map K2 • 312-280-8800 • www.fourseasons.com • $$$$$
Chicago £ Peninsula Understated elegance sums up this hotel. Large, earth-toned rooms have dressing areas, and a steam-free TV screen and hands-free telephone is found in every bathroom. Floorto-ceiling windows dramatize the lobby, where afternoon tea is accompanied by live classical music. d 108 E. Superior St. • Map L2 • 312337-2888 • http://fasttrack. chicago.peninsula.com • $$$$$
Chicago % Sofitel Water Tower
Hyatt ^ Park Original contemporary art, rich woods, and warm tones create comfortable and tranquil public and private areas at this elegant boutique hotel. The stateof-the-art rooms feature furniture designed by Mies van der Rohe. d 800 N. Michigan Ave. • Map L2 • 312-335-1234 • www.park chicago.hyatt.com • $$$$$
& Fairmont Overlooking Grant Park and Lake Michigan, the Fairmont features large, comfortably furnished rooms that include high-
speed internet access, dressing areas, and marble bathrooms. d 200 N. Columbus Dr. • Map L4 • 312-565-8000 • www. fairmont.com • $$–$$$$
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Peninsula Chicago
* Renaissance Chicago Hotel On the south bank of the Chicago River, this 27storey hotel affords amazing city views. Inviting guest rooms feature muted colors and warm woods, and there are spa packages available for men and women. d 1 W. Wacker Dr. • Map K3 • 312-372-7200 • www.renaissancehotels.com • $$$$
( InterContinental Chicago One of the city’s most luxurious hotels, which mixes historic charm with contemporary elegance. This former men’s club (see p27) has stunning public rooms, including a swimming pool, and very comfortable guest rooms. d 505 N. Michigan Ave. • Map L2 • 312-944-4100 • www.chicago.inter continental.com • $$$$
Chicago ) Conrad Simple elegance and contemporary décor are features of this luxury hotel. In addition to 311 guestrooms and suites, there is The Restaurant at Conrad, The Terrace at Conrad, and Rendez-Vous (a stylish lounge). d 521 N. Rush St. • Map L2 • 312645-1500 • www.conrad hotels.com • $$$
Unless otherwise stated, all hotels accept credit cards, have private bathrooms, air con, non-smoking rooms, and rooms with DA
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Left The Hilton Chicago Right Guest room, Hotel Burnham
Historic Hotels Hilton ! The Chicago When it opened in 1927 The Hilton was the world’s largest hotel. Popular with US presidents, it oozes opulence – especially the Versailles-inspired Grand Ballroom. The Executive Class King Lakeview rooms offer the best views. d 720 S. Michigan Ave. • Map L6 • 312-922-4400 • www. chicagohilton.com • $$$
House @ Palmer Hilton Palmer House, recently renovated, has been an elegant fixture in the heart of the Loop for over 125 years. Extravagant frescoes decorate the ornate lobby’s ceiling, while the guest rooms are subtly elegant. The hotel even has its own upscale shopping arcade. d 17 E. Monroe St. • Map L4 • 312-726-7500 • www. chicagohilton.com • $$
Burnham £ Hotel The Reliance Building – a handsome example of the Chicago School of architecture (see pp36–7) – was reborn as the boutique Hotel Burnham in 1999. Plush rooms are decorated in gold and blue, some with great views. A complimentary wine reception is held every evening. d 1 W. Washington St. • Map J4 • 312-782-1111 • www.burnhamhotel.com • $$$$–$$$$$
$ Omni Ambassador East In its heyday, this lavish hotel hosted stars such as
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Frank Sinatra and Liza Minelli. Comfortable rooms sport dark wood furniture and chintz furnishings; public areas, such as the Pump Room (see p83), are more impressive. d 1301 N. State Pkwy. • Off map • 312-787-7200 • www.omnihotels.com • $$
The Talbott
% Enjoy the quiet elegance of this small, family-owned, Europeanstyle hotel. The Victorian parlor-like lobby and atmospheric Basil’s bar and café offer a chance to unwind, and the 149 guest rooms and suites are large and welcoming. d 20 E. Delaware Pl. • Map K2 • 312-944-4970 • www. talbotthotel.com • $$$
Hotel ^ Allerton Originally a residential hotel, the Allerton has a high-ceilinged, 1940sinspired lobby, and large, traditional guest rooms with marble baths and lots of amenities. Don’t miss the panorama from the 25th floor. d 701 N. Michigan Ave. • Map L2 • 312440-1500 • www.sixconti nentshotels.com • $$–$$$
The Whitehall
& A quiet, understated European ambience has permeated this hotel since it opened in 1928. The 221 guest rooms combine elegant tradition with mod cons, and the Presidential Suite was a favorite of Katherine Hepburn. Check out the Fornetto Mei
restaurant with its menu of neo-Milanese cuisine and thin-crust specialty pizzas. d 105 E. Delaware Pl. • Map K2 • 312-9446300 • www.whitehallhotel. com • $$–$$$
Raphael * The This former nurses’ residence, built in the 1920s, now aptly bills itself as a quaint little hotel with old-world charm. The general effect is light and spacious, though some of the rooms and furnishings are a little tired. d 201 E. Delaware Pl. • Map K2 • 312-943-5000 • www. raphaelchicago.com • $$
Tremont ( The An inviting fireplace welcomes you at this 1920s-built hotel, where guest rooms are small but comfortable; some have antique furniture and fourposters. Mike Ditka’s restaurant is famous for its steaks and the collection of sports memorabilia. d 100 E. Chestnut St. • Map K2 • 312-751-1900 • www. tremontchicago.com • $$
) Millennium Knickerbocker This hotel, once owned by Playboy Magazine, has hosted guests as famous as John Kennedy and Al Capone. Its 1930s lobby holds the Martini Bar (with live music most days), and the guest rooms exude a timeless elegance. d 163 E. Walton Pl. • Map L2 • 312-751-8100 • www. millenniumhotels.com • $$$
Unless otherwise stated, all hotels accept credit cards, have private bathrooms, air con, non-smoking rooms, and rooms with DA
Price Categories For a standard, double room per night (with breakfast if included), taxes and extra charges.
$ $$ $$$ $$$$ $$$$$
under $100 $100–200 $200–300 $300–400 over $400
Stylish Stays Chicago !W Lakeshore A Zen water wall and “Leave me alone”, rather than “Do not disturb” signs are indications of the W’s hipper take on the hotel experience. The modern guest rooms have lovely views, as does the rooftop lounge, Whiskey Sky (see p44). d 644 N. Lake Shore Dr. • Map M3 • 312-943-9200 • www.whotels.com • $$$
Mansion @ Wheeler An immaculate 11room hotel, this 130-yearold mansion is known for its great attention to detail. Soak up the lavish artwork, period features, and antique furniture, or take it easy in the tranquil garden. d 2020 S. Calumet Ave. • Off map • 312-9452020 • www.wheeler mansion.com • $$$
of £ House Blues Hotel This amazing hotel is much more than just somewhere to lay your head. A golden Buddha welcomes guests, and the atmospheric Kaz Bar has a Moroccan theme. State-of-the-art rooms offer hi-tech entertainment and eclectic decor. d 333 N. Dearborn St. • Map K3 • 312-245-0333 • www. houseofblues.com • $$
Chicago City $W Center This hotel is trendy yet traditional, with comfy couches and board games
in the lobby. Guest room decor is inspired by 1940s Hollywood glamor, with chaises longues and ostrich-leather headboards. d 172 W. Adams St. • Map J4 • 312-332-1200 • www. whotels.com • $$$–$$$$
Hotel Monaco
% Most of the luxe
rooms in this stylish 14story hotel feature window seats (a.k.a “secluded meditation stations”), while the spirit is further calmed by aromatherapy oils in the bathrooms. Pep things up in the Party Like a Rock Star Suite, complete with jukebox and Jacuzzi tub. d 225 N. Wabash Ave. • Map K3 • 312-960-8500 • www. monaco-chicago.com • $$
Blake ^ Hotel This hotel contained printing presses before ever housing people. Now a National Historic Landmark, it offers large, light rooms. Savor Midwestern delicacies at the award-winning Custom House restaurant. d 500 S. Dearborn St. • Map K5 • 312-986-1234 • www.printersrow.hyatt.com • $$$
&
Crowne Plaza Silversmith
Built in 1897, this beautiful building incorporates both Romanesque Revival and Arts and Crafts styles. The large guest rooms have Frank Lloyd Wright-inspired furniture, high ceilings, and large windows. A
complimentary dessert hour is offered Monday through Thursday for inhouse guests. d 10 S. Wabash Ave. • Map K4 • 312-372-7696 • www. crowneplaza.com • $$$
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Left Garden, Gold Coast Guest House B&B Right Wheeler Mansion
Rock Hotel * Hard This extravagant 381room, musically themed hotel occupies the former Carbide and Carbon building – an Art Deco creation of 1929. Piped music and memorabilia are everywhere, and rooms are stylish but fun. d 230 N. Michigan Ave. • Map L2 • 312-345-1000 • www.hardrock.com • $$$
Allegro ( Hotel Here, designer Cheryl Rowley has combined classic Art Deco features with contemporary colors and textures to great effect at this musically themed hotel. Complimentary wine is a standard nightly offering for guests. Fresh and fun. d 171 W. Randolph St. • Map J4 • 312-236-0123 • www.hotelallegro chicago.com • $$$
Coast Guest ) Gold House B&B This 1873 town house makes a pleasant change from the large hotels, with just four individually decorated rooms. Guests are welcome to use the comfortable sitting room and ivy-walled garden. d 113 W. Elm St. • Map K1 • 312-337-0361 • www. bbchicago.com • No DA • $$
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Streetsmart
Left Homewood Suites Right Lobby, Hilton Garden Inn
Budget Sleeps Western ! Best Hawthorne Terrace Warm and inviting sums up this 59-room hotel. An outdoor terrace overlooks the Lake View area, and guests can also use a small exercise room with sauna and whirlpool. Continental breakfast is included. d 3434 N. Broadway • Map E2 • 1-773-2443434 • www.hawthorne terrace.com • $$
@
Days Inn Lincoln Park North
This hotel is Chicago’s highest-rated Days Inn. Free passes to the fitness center next door are part of the deal when you stay, as well as a continental breakfast and free wi-fi throughout the hotel. d 644 W. Diversey Pkwy. • Map E2 • 1-773-525-7010 • www.lpndaysinn.com • $$
£
Belmont City Suites
A favorite of gangsters and mob bosses during Prohibition, this cozy, refurbished hotel now stands in the center of what makes Lakeview popular. Steps from Boys Town’s Halsted Strip, this is a great choice for those who like city nightlife. d 933 W. Belmont Ave.• Map E2 • 773-404-3400 • www.cityinns.com • $$
Suites $ Embassy Chicago:Downtown Lakefront
The impressive 13-story Sky Lobby offers a great place to unwind, with its
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soaring atrium. Glasssided elevators whisk guests to suites with amenities that include high-speed Internet access and microwaves. Full American breakfast is also included. d 511 N. Columbus Dr. • Map L4 • 1-888-903-8884 • www. chicagoembassy.com • $$$
Inn at % The Lincoln Park This hotel’s Tudor-style exterior, Victorian lobby, and wagon-wheel trim are best described as eclectic. And while the rooms are definitely no-frills, the complimentary breakfast with views of Lincoln Park is a plus. d 601 W. Diversey Pkwy. • Map E2 • 1-773-348-2810 • $–$$
^
Homewood Suites by Hilton
The two-room suites in this great value hotel all have fully equipped kitchens, as well as living rooms with extra queensize sofa beds. Use of the 19th-floor indoor pool and the fitness center all add to your stay here. d 40 E. Grand Ave. • Map L3 • 312644-2222 • www.homewood suiteschicago.com • $$$
Garden Inn & Hilton Each of this hotel’s functional and spacious 357 rooms offers a large desk, complimentary highspeed Internet access, and many other amenities. Six corner suites offer the perfect setup for families and groups of friends: the
hotel also has a pool and gym. d 10 E .Grand Ave. • Map L3 • 312-595-0000 • www.hiltongardeninn.com • $$$
Inn * Hampton & Suites This centrally located, family-friendly hotel offers two-room suites – with fully equipped kitchens – as well as many standard guest rooms. Bonuses include the fitness facility, indoor pool, complimentary breakfast buffet, and daily newspaper. d 33 W. Illinois St. • Map K3 • 312-832-0330 • www. hamptoninn.com • $$$
Roof Inn ( Red Chicago This is a great option for budget-minded travelers. Rooms at this centrally located inn are small, but they have all the essentials. A branch of the Coco Pazzo restaurant chain is on site. d 162 E. Ontario St. • Map L2 • 312-787-3580 • www.redroof.com • $$
Inter) Hostelling national Chicago This place is great value if you don’t mind sleeping in a basic dormitory with local students, and you don’t need to be a member in order to stay here. The facility includes lounges, fully equipped kitchens, and bed linen. d 24 E. Congress Pkwy. • Map L5 • 312-360-0300 • www.hichicago.org • $
Some budget accommodations offer weekday evening receptions with complimentary refreshments.
Price Categories For a standard, double room per night (with breakfast if included), taxes and extra charges.
$ $$ $$$ $$$$ $$$$$
under $100 $100–200 $200–300 $300–400 over $400
Business-Friendly Stays Chicago ! Sheraton Hotel & Towers The large, stylish guest rooms here offer fantastic lake, city, or river views. The hotel also has its own business center, boat dock, health club, and five restaurants. Popular with conventioneers. d 301 E. North Water St. • Off map • 312-464-1000 • www.sheraton chicago.com • $$$
Chicago @ Westin River North This sleek, four-star venue is home to a state-of-theart Executive Business Center, fitness facility, and smoke-free guest rooms featuring the comfortable Westin Heavenly Bed. d 320 N. Dearborn Ave. • Map K3 • 312-744-1900 • www. westinrivernorth.com • $$$
Regency £ Hyatt McCormick Place Linked by a connecting walkway to McCormick Place convention center, the basic but modern rooms of the 32-story Hyatt Regency are an attractive stopover for conventioneers. The hotel also has a fitness facility. d 2233 S. Martin Luther King Dr. • Map D5 • 312567-1234 • www.mccormick place.hyatt.com • $$
Embassy Suites Hotel O’HareRosemont
$
This hotel’s seven-story garden atrium makes a pleasant retreat from the hustle and bustle of the
nearby convention center and airport. Suites have all the necessary facilities; cooked breakfasts and an airport shuttle are complimentary. d 5500 N. River Rd., Rosemont • Off map • 1-847-678-4000 • www. embassyohare.com • $$$
% Swissôtel Rising up where the Chicago River and Lake Michigan meet is this dramatic glass-and-steel creation. Oversized guest rooms contain every convenience for the business traveller and provide stellar views of the city. d 323 E. Wacker Dr. • Map L3 • 312-565-0565 • www. swissotel.com • $$$
^
Hyatt Regency Chicago
A lobby full of greenery and fountains welcomes guests into this, the biggest hotel in the Hyatt chain. Although all guest rooms offer high speed Internet access, you can opt for a “Business Plan” upgrade to obtain more specific benefits during your stay. d 151 E. Wacker Dr. • Map L3 • 312-5651234 • www.hyatt.com • $$$–$$$$
Marriott & Chicago Downtown This 46-story hotel’s contemporary rooms are designed to cater to every business need. Guests can also enjoy the hotel’s five restaurants and lounges, or its on-site pool and fitness center.
d 540 N. Michigan Ave. • Map L2 • 312-836-0100 • www.marriott.com • $$$
Streetsmart
View of Atrium, Embassy Suites Chicago Downtown
Suites * Embassy Hotel Chicago
Downtown
The lofty atrium here is filled with plants, birds, and fountains; the tworoom suites are spacious and well-equipped; service is personal; and cooked breakfasts plus other perks are included. d 600 N. State St. • Map K2 • 312-943-3800 • www. embassysuites.com • $$
by ( Courtyard Marriott Chicago
Downtown
Bright, modern rooms with high speed Internet access, a spacious work area, and an extra sofabed make this centrally located hotel a popular choice among leisure and business travelers alike. d 30 E. Hubbard St. • Map K3 • 312-329-2500 • www. courtyard.com • $$
Chicago ) Hilton O’Hare Airport The only hotel actually on airport grounds (conveniently linked to airport terminals via underground walkways) offers an enhanced business center, providing state-ofthe-art telecommunications and multimedia conference facilities. Rooms are well soundproofed. d O’Hare Airport • Map A3 • 1-773-686-8000 • www.hilton.com • $$$
Unless otherwise stated, all hotels accept credit cards, have private bathrooms, air con, non-smoking rooms, and rooms with DA
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Index
General Index A Ada’s Famous Deli 75 Addams, Jane 35, 39, 95 Adler, Dankmar 36 Adler Planetarium 93, 95 air travel 107 alcohol 109 Alise’s Designer Shoes 102 Allerton Hotel 116 Amazing Chicago’s Funhouse Maze 21 Ambria 40, 91 American Apparel 88 American Girl Place 27, 57, 82 Andersonville 52 Andy’s Jazz Club 47 Ann Sather 91 Anthropologie 82 antiques 113 Aquarium, John G. Shedd 6, 22–3 , 56, 93, 95 architecture architects 37 The Loop 72–3 Arlington Park 51 Armitage Avenue 59 Armitage/Halsted Shopping District 85, 87 art exhibitions 113 see also museums Art Institute of Chicago 6, 8–11 , 60, 69, 71 Arthur Heurtley House 30 Arthur Rubloff Paperweight Collection 11 Artisans 21, 102 arts venues 48–9 Arun’s 42 Ashcroft, John 29 Atwood, Charles 19 Atwood Café 75 Auditorium Theatre 36 Avondale 52 B Baha’i Temple 65 Bar Louie Taylor 96 Bar Louie on the Park 90 Barker & Meowsky 88 Barneys New York 82 bars and clubs 44–5 gay and lesbian bars 89 Northside 89–90 South Loop 96
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baseball 51 Black Sox scandal 34 Wrigley Field 57, 85 basketball 51 beaches 62–3 Foster Beach 63 Montrose Beach 63 North Avenue Beach 62, 86 Oak Street Beach 62 Beachy House 31 Beatnix 88 Bed & Breakfasts 114 Belmont City Suites 118 Berlin 89 Best Western Hawthorne Terrace 118 Beviamo Wine Bar 96 Bike Chicago tours 111 Bin 36 45, 83 “Black Sox” 34 Blackbird 40 Bloomingdale’s 82 Bloomingdale’s Home & Furniture Store 59 Blue Chicago 47 B.L.U.E.S. 46 blues and jazz joints 46–7 Blues Heaven Foundation 93 boats cruises 111 water taxis 108 Bond Chapel 28 Bongo Room, The 95 bookstores 113 Bootleg Houses 31 Botington, William W. 80 Boys Town 85 Bridgeport 53 Broadway Antique Market 58 Bronzeville 65 Brookfield Zoo 65 Buckingham, Kate 71 Bucks Saloon 89 Bucktown Neighborhood 58 Buddy Guy’s Legends 46, 95, 96 budget travel 110 hotels 118 Burnham, Daniel 19, 37, 63, 72 Burnham and Root 36, 70 Burnham Park 63
Burroughs, Edgar Rice 30 buses 107, 108 C Café at American Girl Place, The 57 Café Brauer 87 Caillebotte, Gustave, Paris Street: Rainy Day 8 Calder, Alexander 72 Calypso Café 103 Capone, Al 34–5, 59 carriage tours 111 cars 107, 108 driver’s licenses 106 rental 107 Carson Pirie Scott Building 72 Cassatt, Mary 27 The Child’s Bath 9 Catch 35, 75 Cedars of Lebanon 103 Chagall, Marc 110 Four Seasons 73 Charles Matthews House 31 Charlie Trotter’s 40, 91 Cheney, Mamah 31 Chez Joel 97 Chicago Air & Water Show 51 Chicago Architecture Foundation (CAF) Shop 59 tours 111 Chicago Bears 51 Chicago Blackhawks 51 Chicago Blues Festival 50 Chicago Board of Trade 70 Chicago Botanic Garden 64 Chicago Bulls 51 Chicago Children’s Museum 20, 56 Chicago Cubs 51 Chicago Cultural Center 69, 71 Chicago Fire 51 Chicago Firehouse 97 Chicago Gospel Music Festival 50 Chicago Greeters 111 Chicago History Museum 86, 87
cycling 108 tours 111 D Daley, Richard J. 35 Daley Center 60 Daley Plaza 60, 73 Days Inn Lincoln Park North 118 dental emergencies 112 department stores 113 Devon Avenue 52 Dewes, Francis 87 disabled visitors 109 discount outlets 113 discounts 106, 110 Dixie Kitchen & Bait Shop 101, 103 doctors 112 Drake Hotel, The 26, 60–61, 81, 115 dress codes 114 drinking 109 driver’s licenses 106 Dubuffet, Jean 70 Duke of Perth, The 90 Du Sable, Jean Baptiste Point 35, 39, 99 Du Sable Museum of African-American History 39, 99 E Edwin Cheney House 31 El (elevated trains), The 56, 69, 108 film locations 61 tours 111 electric current 106 Elks National Memorial Building 87 Embassy Suites Chicago: Downtown Lakefront 118 Embassy Suites Hotel Chicago Downtown 119 Embassy Suites Hotel O’Hare-Rosemont 119 Emerald City Theatre Company 57 emergencies 112 erwin 91 ethnic neighborhoods 52–3 ethnic restaurants 42–3, 114 Evanston 65 events 50–51, 109 budget travel 110
Everest 75 F Fairmont 115 Far South 98–103 map 98 restaurants 103 shopping 102 walk 101 Federal Center 72 Federal Reserve Bank 73 Fermi, Enrico 29, 35 Ferris Wheel 21 festivals and events 50–51 Field, Marshall 14 Field Museum 6, 14–15 , 61, 93, 95 57th Street Books 102 Filene’s Basement 74 film locations 60–61 Fine Arts Building 73 fire services 112 Fisher Building 72 Florian Caffé 103 Fly by Nite Gallery 82 Fogo de Chao 43 Foster Beach 63 Four 44 Four Farthings Tavern 90 Four Seasons 115 Fourth Presbyterian Church 80–81 Frances’ 87 Francesca’s on Taylor 97 Francis Dewes Mansion 87 Frank Lloyd Wright’s Oak Park 7, 3 0–3 1 Friedman, Milton 29 Frontera Grill 41, 83 Funky Buddha Lounge 44
Index
Chicago International Airport 107 Chicago Jazz Festival 51 Chicago Marathon 51 Chicago Marriott Downtown 119 Chicago Neighborhood Tours 111 Chicago River 13, 34, 111 Chicago Shakespeare Theater 21, 48 Chicago Summer Neighborhood Festivals 50 Chicago Temple 73 Chicago Theater 72 Chicago Triathlon 51 Chicago White Sox 34, 51 Chicago Wolves 51 children 56–7, 109 Chinatown 53, 94 Circuit 89 CityPass 110 Civic Opera House 48, 73 Clarke, Henry B. 93 climate 106, 112 Closet, The 89 clothes dress codes 114 size conversions 113 what to pack 106 clubs 44–5 South Loop 96 Co-op Market, The 102 Cobb, Henry Ives 28 Cobb, Silas 29 Cobb Gate 29 Cobb Hall 29 Cocktail 89 Coco Pazzo 83 Collections 102 Columbus, Christopher 18, 19 Conrad Chicago 115 consulates 109 Copley, John Singleton 81 Court Theatre 49 Courtyard by Marriott Chicago Downtown 119 Cram, Ralph Adams 81 credit cards 106, 112 crime 112 Crowne Plaza Silversmith 117 cruises 111 CTA tickets and passes 108
G galleries see museums and galleries Gallery 37 Store 74 gardens see parks and gardens Garfield Park Conservatory 64 Garrett Popcorn Shop 27 gay and lesbian bars, bars and clubs 44–5 Northside 89 Gehry, Frank 71 Geja’s Café 91 Gene Siskel Film Center 49
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Index
Gentry on Halsted 89 Gibson’s Steakhouse 40 Gioco 95, 97 Glass, Philip 29 Glessner House 95 Gold Coast Area 80 Gold Coast Guest House B&B 117 Goldberg, Bertrand 37 Goodman, Benny 35 Goodman Theatre 48 Grant Park 12, 62, 71 Great Chicago Fire (1871) 34 Green Dolphin St. 47 Green Mill Cocktail Lounge 46 Griffin, Walter Burley 37 Guthrie’s Tavern 90 H Hammond, Beeby and Babka 69 Hampton Inn & Suites 118 Hard Rock Hotel 117 Harold Washington Library Center 69 Harry Adams House 31 Hawkeye’s Bar & Grill 96 Haymarket Riot (1886) 34 health 112 Heart of Italy 52–3 Hefner, Hugh 35 Helguera, Jesus 38 Hemingway, Ernest 35 Hershey’s Chicago 27, 78, 81 Hilton Chicago, The 61, 116 Hilton Chicago O’Hare Airport 119 Hilton Garden Inn 118 Historic Long Grove 65 Historic Pullman District 64 Historic Water Tower & Pumping Station 26, 80, 81 history 34–5 Holabird, William 37 Holabird and Roche 72, 73 Holabird and Root 70 holidays, public 109 Homer, Winslow 27 The Herring Net 9 Homewood Suites by Hilton 118 Hopper, Edward, Nighthawks 9
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horse-drawn carriage tours 111 horse racing 51 hospitals 112 Hostelling International Chicago 118 Hotel Allegro 117 Hotel Blake 117 Hotel Burnham 71, 116 Hotel Inter-Continental 27, 115 Hotel Monaco 117 hotels 114–19 accommodation and dining tips 114 budget sleeps 118 business-friendly stays 119 historic hotels 116 luxury hotels 115 safety 112 stylish stays 117 taxes 114 tipping 109 Hothouse 96 House of Africa 102 House of Blues 46–7 House of Blues Hotel 117 Hubba-Hubba 88 Hubble, Edwin 29 Hyatt Regency Chicago 119 Hyatt Regency McCormick Place 119 I ice hockey 51 Ikram 82 Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT) 64 IMAX® Theatre 21 immigration 107 information centers 109 Inland Steel Building 72 Inn at Lincoln Park, The 118 insurance 106 International Museum of Surgical Science 39 Internet 109 Isabella Fine Lingerie 88 Italian Village Restaurants 75 Iwan Ries Tobacco 74 Ixcapuzalco 42 J J Bar 45 Jackson Park 62–3 Jahn, Helmut 70
James R. Thompson Center 37, 60, 70 Jane Addams’ Hull House 39, 95 Jenney, William LeBarron 34, 37 Jeweler’s Row 58, 74 John Barleycorn Memorial Pub 90 John G. Shedd Aquarium 6, 22–3, 56, 93, 95 John Hancock Center 12, 26, 79, 81 Jordan, Michael 13, 59, 86 K Kaigetsudo Ancho 11 Kandinsky, Wassily 10 Kayak Tours 111 Keefer’s 83 Kennedy family 13 Kennicott, John A. 100 Kenwood Historic District 100 Kevin 83 Kingston Mines 46, 87 Kit Kat Lounge & Supper Club 89 Kroc, Ray 35 L lake boat tours and cruises 111 Lakeshore Drive 36 La Petite Folie 103 La Pomme Rouge 44 Lawrence, Major Robert 99 Le Bar 45 Le Passage 44–5 Leigh Gallery, The 88 lesbian and gay bars and clubs 44–5 Northside 89 limousines 107 Lincoln Park 62 Lincoln Park Conservatory 86 Lincoln Park Zoo 7, 24–5, 56, 85, 87 Lincoln Square 53 Little Black Pearl Workshop 102 Little Italy 52 Lookingglass Theatre 49 The Loop 68–75 architectural sites 72–3 map 68
M M Lounge 96 McCormick, Colonel Robert 80 McCormick Place 13 McDonald’s 35 Macy’s 71, 74 Magnificent Mile 7, 26–7, 58, 79, 81 Magnificent Mile Holiday Lights Festival 51 Maher, George 30, 37 Marigold 43 Marina City 13, 36 Marquette Building 72 Matisse, Henri 10 Maxwell Street Market 94 Mayfield, Curtis 35 medical emergencies 112 Medici on 57th 101, 103 Mellow Yellow 103 Merchandise Mart 13, 79 Metra 108 Mia Francesca 41, 87, 91 Michigan, Lake 13, 20, 34, 111 Michigan Avenue Bridge 61 Midway Airport 107 Mies van der Rohe, Ludwig 36, 37, 64, 72 Millennium Knickerbocker 116 Millennium Park 62, 71 Miniature Golf Course 21 Mirai 42 Monadnock Building 36, 72 Monet, Claude, Stacks of Wheat series 8 money 106 Monroe, Marilyn 26 Montrose Beach 63 Moore, Colleen 17 Moore, Henry, Nuclear Energy 29, 101 Moran, George “Bugsy”
34 museums and galleries 38–9 Art Institute of Chicago 6, 8–11, 60, 69, 71 Chicago Children’s Museum 20, 56 Chicago Historical Society 86, 87 DuSable Museum of African-American History 39, 99 Field Museum 6, 14–15, 61, 93, 95 International Museum of Surgical Science 39 Jane Addams’ Hull House 39, 95 Museum of Broadcast Communications 38 Museum of Contemporary Art 79, 81 Museum of Contemporary Photography 94 Museum of Holography 38 Museum of Science and Industry 6, 16–19, 57, 99, 101 National Museum of Mexican Art 38 National Vietnam Veterans Art Museum 39 Oriental Institute 28 Peace Museum 38 Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum 85 Smart Museum of Art 28, 101 Smith Museum of Stained-Glass Windows 20 Spertus Museum 39 Swedish-American Museum Center 38 music blues and jazz joints 46–7 stores 113 Musical Carousel 21 N National Museum of Mexican Art 38 National Vietnam Veterans Art Museum 39, 94–5 Navy Pier 6, 13,
20–21, 56 Near North 78–83 map 78 restaurants 83 shopping 82 walk 81 Ness, Eliot 29 NetWorks 96 newspapers 109 niche museums 38–9 Nile Restaurant 103 Nine 71, 75 Nordstrom Rack 74 North Avenue Beach 62, 86 North Pond 91 North Pond Café 40 Northside 84–91 gay and lesbian bars 89 map 84 neighborhood bars 90 restaurants 91 shopping 88 walk 87
Index
The Loop (cont.) restaurants 75 shopping 74 walk 71 Loop Theater District 73 Loop Train Tour 111 Lori’s Designer Shoes 88 Lou Mitchell’s 41
O Oak Park 7, 30–31 Oak Street 58 Oak Street Beach 62 Ogilvie Transportation Center 37 O’Keeffe, Georgia 10, 81 Old Navy 74 Old St. Patrick’s Church 73 Old Town Art Fair 50 Old Town School of Folk Music 49 Olive Park 63 Olmsted, Frederick Law 62, 100 Omni Ambassador East 116 Omnimax Theater 17 One North LaSalle 72 opening hours, stores 113 Opera 97 Oriental Institute 28, 99, 101 Original Pancake House 81, 101, 103 Osaka Japanese Gardens 100–101 P Palmer, Bertha Honoré 10 Palmer House Hilton 73, 116 Paper Source 82 Park Hyatt Chicago 81, 115 parks and gardens 62–3 budget travel 110
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Index
parks and gardens (cont.) Burnham Park 63 Chicago Botanic Garden 64 Garfield Park Conservatory 64 Grant Park 12, 62, 71 Jackson Park 62–3 Lincoln Park 62 Lincoln Park Conservatory 86 Millennium Park 62, 71 Olive Park 63 Osaka Japanese Gardens 100–101 Washington Park 100 Washington Square 63 passports 106 Peace Museum 38 Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum 85 Penang 97 Peninsula Chicago 81, 115 Perkins, Dwight 87 Pevsner, Antoine 101 pharmacies 112 Pho Xe Tang-Tank 42 Phoenix 42, 97 phone adapters 106 Picasso, Pablo 10, 110 The Old Guitarist 9 sculpture 60, 70, 71, 73 pickpockets 112 Pierrot Gourmet 83 Pilsen 52 Pizzeria Uno 41 Planetarium, Adler 93, 95 planning 106 Pleasant Home 30 police 112 Polo/Ralph Lauren 82 Pompei Bakery 97 P.O.S.H. 82 Poster Plus 74 Powell’s Bookstore 102 Prairie Avenue Bookshop 59, 74 Prairie Avenue District 93, 95 public holidays 109 public transport, safety 112 Pullman, George 64 Pump Room 83 R radio 109 rail travel 108 Randolph El Station 61
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Raphael, The 116 Ravinia Festival 50 Red Apple 43 Red Lion Pub 90 Red Roof Inn Chicago 118 Regenstein, Joseph 29 Regenstein Library 29 Rehab 89 Reliance Building 36, 72 Renaissance Chicago Hotel 115 Renoir, Pierre Auguste, Acrobats at the Circus Fernando 6, 8 reservations, restaurants 114 restaurants 40–43 accommodation and dining tips 114 budget travel 110 Far South 103 The Loop 75 Near North 83 Northside 91 South Loop 97 tipping 109 Rhapsody 71, 75 Ritz-Carlton 115 river boat tours 111 River North Gallery District 79 Rivera, Diego 38 Rivers 74 RL 83 Robie, Frederick C. 29 Robie House 29, 100, 101 Robinson’s No.1 Ribs 91 Roche, Martin 37 Rockefeller, John D. 28, 29 Rockefeller Memorial Chapel 29 Rookery, The 36, 70–71 Rosa’s 47 Roscoe’s Tavern 89 Rosebud Café 97 Rosenwald, Julius 19 Roth, Philip 29 Rowley, Cynthia 88 Russian Tea Time 75 S Sagan, Carl 29 sales 113 sales taxes 113, 114 Sandburg, Carl 35 Santa Fe Center 72 Sather, Ann 43
Schubas Tavern & Harmony Grill 90 sculpture, The Loop 70 Sears on State 74 Sears Tower 6, 12–13, 37, 69 seasonal hazards 112 Second City 49 security 112 Seminary Co-Op Bookstore 102 senior discounts 106 Shakespeare, William 21, 48 Shaw, Howard Van Doren 100 Shedd, John G. 22 Shedd Aquarium 6, 22–3, 56, 93, 95 Sheraton Chicago Hotel & Towers 119 Sheridan Road 64 shoes, size conversions 113 shopping 58–9, 113 Far South 102 The Loop 74 Magnificent Mile 7, 26–7, 58, 79, 81 Near North 82 Northside 88 shopping malls 113 shuttle buses 107 Sidetrack 89 Skidmore, Owings & Merrill 12, 79 Skyline Stage 20 skyscrapers 36–7 Smart, David and Alfred 28 Smart Museum of Art 28, 101 Smith Museum of StainedGlass Windows 20 smoking 109 soccer 51 Sofitel Chicago Water Tower 115 Soldier Field 12 Sonotheque 45 Sontag, Susan 29 Soundings 95 South Loop 92–7 bars and clubs 96 map 92 restaurants 97 walk 95 South Loop Club 96
T Taft, Lorado, Fountain of Time 100 The Talbott 116 Tallmadge, Thomas Eddy 31 Tarasacas 91 Taste of Chicago 50 taxes, sales 113, 114 taxis 107, 108 Taylor Street 52 telephones 109 hotlines 112 phone adapters 106 television 109 audience tickets 110 Terkel, Studs 29 theater, budget travel 110 theft 112 Thorne, Narcissa Ward 11 Tiffany, Louis Comfort 20, 69 Tiffin 42–3 time zone 106 Tin Lizzie, The 90 tipping 109 Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri de, At the Moulin Rouge 8 tourist information 109 tours 111 budget travel 110 Toys, Etc. 102
trains 107, 108 The El (elevated trains) 56, 69, 108 safety 112 Trattoria No.10 71, 75 travel 107–8 traveler’s checks 106 Tremont, The 116 Tribune Tower 27, 80 trolley buses 108 U Ultimo 82 Unabridged Bookstore 88 Uncle Fun 88 Union Station 60 United Center 13 Unity Temple 30 University of Chicago, The 7, 28–9, 99 Oriental Institute 28, 99, 101 sculptures 101 Untouchable Tours 111 Uptown 53 V Valentine’s Day Massacre (1929) 34–5 Van Gogh, Vincent, Selfportrait 10 Vaux, Calvert 100 Velvet Lounge, The 47, 96 Venetian Night 50–51 Vernon Park Tap 96 visas 106 Vostell, Wolf 101 W W Chicago City Center Hotel 117 W Chicago Lakeshore Hotel 117 Wabash Avenue 95 Wacker Drive 37 walks 108 Far South 101 The Loop 71 Near North 81 Northside 87 South Loop 95 tours 111 Washington, Harold 35, 69, 99 Washington Park 100 Washington Square 63 water taxis 108
Water Tower Place 26, 81 Watson, James D. 29 Watson, Vernon S. 31 weather 106, 112 websites 109 Weese, Harry 37 Westfield North Bridge Mall 56–7, 113 Westin Chicago River North 119 Wheeler Mansion 117 Whiskey Bar 83 Whiskey Sky 44 Whistler, James A. McNeill 81 Whitehall, The 116 Wilde, Oscar 80 Winfrey, Oprah 35 Wood, Grant, American Gothic 9 Woodlawn Tap 103 Wright, Frank Lloyd 37, 59 Art Institute of Chicago 10, 11 Frank Lloyd Wright’s Oak Park 7, 30–31 Gold Coast Area 80 Home & Studio 30 Kenwood Historic District 100 Robie House 29, 100, 101 Rookery, The 71 Wrightwood Tap 90 Wrigley Building 27, 61 Wrigley Field 57, 85
Index
South Shore Cultural Center 99 Southport Lanes and Billiards 90 souvenirs 59, 113 Spertus Museum 39 Spin 89 sports 51 Spring 40–41 Stanley’s Kitchen & Tap 91 State Street 58, 70, 71 Steppenwolf Theatre Co. 48 student discounts 106 Sullivan, Louis H. 31, 36, 37, 72, 80 Swedish-American Museum Center 38 Swissôtel 119 Symphony Center 48, 71, 73
Y Yonkha, R.R. 95 Z Zebra Lounge 44, 83 zoos Brookfield Zoo 65 Lincoln Park Zoo 7, 24–5, 56, 85, 87
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Acknowledgements
Acknowledgements The Authors
Picture Credits
Chicago-based freelancer Elaine Glusac specializes in travel writing for an array of publications including National Geographic Traveler and the International Herald Tribune.
t-top, tl-top left; tlc-top left centre; tc-top centre; tr-top right; clacentre left above; ca-centre above; cra-centre right above; cl-centre left; c-centre; cr-centre right; clbcentre left below; cb-centre below; crb-centre right below; blbottom left, b-bottom; bc-bottom centre; bcl-bottom centre left; brbottom right; d-detail.
Elisa Kronish is a Chicago native who has written about the city’s highlights and hidden finds for a variety of print and online travel guides such as Citysearch Chicago. Roberta Sotonoff is a travel junkie. She writes about a variety of travel destinations, and her work has appeared worldwide in over 40 newspapers, magazines, on-line sites and guidebooks. Produced by Departure Lounge, London Editorial Director Naomi Peck Art Director Lisa Kosky Picture Researcher Debbie Woska Editorial and Design Assistance Kelly Thompson, Davin Kuntze, Debbie Woska, Caroline Blake Photographer Jim Warych Additional Photography Andrew Leyerle Illustrator Lee Redmond Maps (DK India) Managing Editor: Aruna Ghose, Senior Cartographer: Uma Bhattacharya, Cartographers: Suresh Kumar, Alok Pathak Proofreader Mary Sutherland Factchecker Misty Tosh Indexer Hilary Bird AT DORLING KINDERSLEY Publishing Managers Fay Franklin, Kate Poole Senior Art Editor Marisa Renzullo Publisher Douglas Amrine Senior Cartographic Editor Casper Morris DTP Jason Little, Conrad van Dyk Production Controller Shane Higgins Additional Contributions Emily Anderson, D Clancy, Robert Devendorf, Rada Radojicic, Brett Steel, Ros Walford
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Every effort has been made to trace the copyright holders, and we apologize for any unintentional omissions. We would be pleased to insert the appropriate acknowledgements in any subsequent editions of this publication. Works of art have been reproduced with the permission of the following copyright holders: Table and chairs Robbie House Frank Lloyd-Wright © ARS, NY and DACS, London 2007 100tr. The publishers would like to thank the following individuals, companies and picture libraries for their kind permission to reproduce their photographs. 20th CENTURY FOX: 61tr; ALAMY: Arcaid Ed 31tl; Edward Hattersley 4–5; Andre Jenny 66–67; Kim Karpeles 12crb; Jason Lindsey 32–33; Popperfoto 34c, 37d; ALAN KLEHR:14–15c, 76–77; ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO: 6cra, 8cb, 9c, 2tl, 9tl, 9cra, 10 bl; American Gothic Grant Wood, Friends of the American Art Collection. All rights reserved by Art Institute of Chicago © Estate of Grant Wood/DACS, London/VAGA, New York 2007 9bl; Ritual Cache Figure North American, New Mexico, Mimbres, Salado Region 10tl; Tennessee, Entrance Hall, 1835, ‘Thorne Miniature Room’ 10tc; Panorama of Eight Views of
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Acknowledgements
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Street Index
Selected Street Index
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8th Street, East 9th Street, East 11th Street, East 13th Street, East 18th Street, West 31st Street, West 47th Street, West 51st Street, East 52nd Street, East 53rd Street, East 54th Street, East 55th Street, East 56th Street, East 57th Street, East 58th Street, East 59th Street, East 60th Street, East 61st Street, East 63rd Street, East Ada Street, North Adams Street, West Addison Road, West Archer Avenue Armitage Avenue, West Ashland Avenue, North Ashland Avenue, South Aveland Avenue, West Balbo Avenue, East Barry Avenue, West Belden Avenue, West Bellevue Place, East Belmont Avenue, West Blackstone Avenue, South Blue Island Avenue, South Broadway Bryn Mawr Avenue Buckingham Road, West Burling Avenue, North Canal Street, North Canal Street, South Cannon Drive, North Cedar Street, East Central Avenue Cermak Road Chestnut Street, East Chestnut Street, West Chicago Avenue, East Chicago Avenue, West Cicero Avenue Clark Avenue, North Clark Street, North Clark Street, South Cleveland Avenue, North Clifton Avenue, North Clinton Street, North Clinton Street, South Clybourn Avenue, North Columbus Drive, North Columbus Drive, South Congress Parkway, West Congress Street, West Cornell Avenue, South Cornell Drive, South Cottage Grove Ave., South Daley Plaza Damen Avenue Dan Ryan Expressway Dearborn Street, North Dearborn Street, South Delaware Place, East Des Plaines Street, South Devon Avenue Dickens Avenue, West Diversey Parkway, West Division Street, East Division Street, West Dorchester Avenue, South Drexel Boulevard, South Eisenhower Expressway Elizabeth Avenue, North Ellis Avenue, South Elm Street, East
K5 K5 K6 K6 B5 A5 B6 D5 E5 E5 E5 E5 E5 E6 E6 E6 E6 E6 E6 G3 J4 D1 A6 E4 D2 G5 D1 L5 E2 E3 L1 E2 F5 H6 E2 A3 E2 E3 J3 J5 F3 L1 A4 B5 K2 K2 L2 J2 A4 E2 K2 K6 E3 D2 J4 J4 D3 L4 L5 K5 H5 F5 F6 D6 K4 B4 H4 K3 K5 K2 J4 B3 E3 E2 K1 J1 E6 E5 A5 G3 E5 L1
Chicago’s Grid System Nearly all streets in Chicago run east-west or north–south. The zero point is at the intersection of Madison Street (running east-west) and State Street (running north-south). All streets are labelled in relation to this point: for example, the section of State Street north of Madison is known as North State Street. Numbering also begins at the zero point and odd numbers are on the east sides of northsouth streets and the south sides of east-west streets. Elm Street, West K1 Erie Street, East L2 Erie Street, West K2 Eugenie Street, West F4 Fairbanks Court, North L2 Franklin Street, North J2 Franklin Street, South J5 Fremont Street, North E4 Fullerton Avenue, West D3 Fullerton Parkway, West E3 Fulton Street, West H3 George Avenue, West E2 Goethe Street, East K1 Goethe Street, West J1 Grace Road, West D1 Grand Avenue, East L3 Grand Avenue, West K3 Greenwood Avenue, South E5 Halsted Street, North E2 Halsted Street, South H6 Harper Avenue, South F5 Harrison Street, East K5 Harrison Street, West K5 Hubbard Street, West K3 Hudson Avenue, North E4 Huron Street, East L2 Huron Street, West K2 Hyde Park Boulevard, East E5 Hyde Park Boulevard, South F5 Illinois Street, East K3 Illinois Street, West K3 Indiana Avenue, South L6 Ingleside Avenue, South E5 Irving Park Road, West D1 Jackson Boulevard, West J4 Jackson Drive, East L4 Jefferson Street, South J4 Kedzie Avenue B4 Kenmore Avenue, North E2 Kennedy Expressway D4 Kenwood Avenue, South E6 Kimbark Avenue, South E5 Kingsbury Street, North H1 Kinzie Street, West K3 Lake Park Avenue, South F5 Lake Shore Drive, North M3 Lake Shore Drive, South L5 Lake Street, East L3 Lake Street, West J3 Lake View Avenue, North E3 Lasalle Street, North K2 Lasalle Street, South K5 Lawrence Avenue B3 Lincoln Avenue, North E3 Lincoln Park, North F3 Madison Street, East K4 Madison Street, West J4 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive D5 Maxwell Street, West J6 Mcfetridge Drive L6 Melrose Road, West E2 Michigan Avenue, North L2 Michigan Avenue, South L6 Milwaukee Avenue B4 Monroe Street, West K4 Montrose Avenue A3 Morgan Street, South H5
Newport Road, West North Avenue, West Oak Park Avenue Oak Street, East Oak Street, West Oakdale Avenue, West Ogden Avenue Ohio Street, East Ohio Street, West Ontario Street, East Ontario Street, West Orchard Avenue, North Orleans Street, North Pearson Street, East Pershing Road Peterson Avenue Plaisance, North Plaisance, South Polk Street, West Pulaski Road Racine Avenue, North Racine Avenue, South Randolph Street, East Randolph Street, West Roosevelt Road, East Roosevelt Road, West Roscoe Road, West Rush Street, North Schiller Street, West School Road, West Scott Street, East Scott Street, West Sedgwick Street, North Seminary Avenue, North Sheffield Avenue, North Sheridan Road, North Sheridan Road, West Southport Avenue, North State Street, North State Street, South Stetson Avenue, North Stevenson Expressway Stockton Drive, North Stony Island Avenue, South Superior Street, East Superior Street, West Taylor Street, West University Avenue, South Van Buren Street, East Van Buren Street, West Wabash Avenue, North Wabash Avenue, South Wacker Drive, East Wacker Drive, South Wacker Drive, West Walton Place, East Walton Street, West Washington Square Washington Street, West Webster Avenue, West Wellington Avenue, West Wells Street, North Wells Street, South Western Avenue Wisconsin Street, West Woodlawn Avenue, South Wrightwood Avenue, West
D1 F4 A5 L1 K1 E2 B5 L3 K3 L2 K2 E3 J2 L2 B6 A3 E6 E6 K5 A5 G3 G6 L4 J4 L6 J6 E1 L2 F4 D2 K1 J1 J1 D2 E2 E1 E1 D1 K2 K6 L3 A6 F3 F6 L2 K2 H6 E5 K5 K5 K3 K4 L3 J4 K3 L2 K2 K2 J4 E3 E2 K2 K5 B4 F4 E5 E3